It’s almost like they were designed around something round… I call it the data-wheel!
It’s almost like they were designed around something round… I call it the data-wheel!
I turned to coffee maker on from my bed this morning :-)
Yeah… I don’t think there’s any reason for concern after reading it either. I kind of assumed everything was set up this way already :-)
My gut reaction to the title was also fear.
I just hope we get to swing back by LeBabra’s comment, where he’s stuck doing all the labor at that first camp.
It definitely wins the one line backstory contest.
Don’t get me wrong, both are great jokes.
I suppose I like the other because it’s the opposite. I don’t view it as random throw away, I think it implies that Bender has a lot of weird stuff going on… stuff that’s maybe better to not know about.
He is only one spine short of a Mouseketeers reunion after all ;-) 
Meh… I like it random. Although if chainsaw juggler is an acceptable substitute :-)
I could play almost any modern title with my PC and I’ve tried. I tried remakes of the games I used to like, I’ve tried modern takes on retro games… and I’ve come to accept that what I love are button-mashers :-)
I will play Metal Slug for hours. Any of the overhead shooters from Battle of Midway or almost any of the SciFi side scrolling shooters.
So my advice is try something different. Dig around in old coin-op titles, there are literally thousands and you can download all of them in one torrent.
Skip the AAA+ titles and play something dumb :-)
Awesome! I forgot all about this :-)
Just in case the algorithm does ya’ dirty… some glorious weirdo made a 2 hour supercut out of season 2!
If they don’t trust their specifications, do you? Pick up a Kill-a-Watt or some other way to measure them.
The only thing that comes to mind is that most resistive heaters eventually fail and might draw significant additional current when they do. But you should have plenty of extra margin with a 15A switch.
Waterproof enclosure from Amazon with cable glands on everything and hope for the best. A good power supply (Meanwell or almost any knockoff) will have a thermal cut-out that will kick in before the box melts, but oversize it a by a few inches. At -30 / sub-freezing the rest of the time you won’t have an issue.
I’d add a temp sensor because I rarely even trust myself. But the spec sheet should provide some additional comfort, the last pages are usually graphs of permissible load for a given temperature.
There’s at least one YouTube channel that has a chair mounted to an industrial robot arm… so that would be a Mecha-Monopus…
No.
Good points. I think it’s the occasional genuinely wholesome moment that makes the show feel like an old friend/TOS.
I’m going to pontificate a bit.
I get the impression that there just isn’t quite as much “just works” on offer as there use to be. In the 3ish years I’ve been playing with HA I’ve seen several of them vanish and not return. This has gone hand-in-hand with “improvements” in IoT security.
Personally I have no problem with insecure APIs on my local network. But I’m 20 years out of date, the threat landscape is infinitely more vast and people I’ve never met are looking to fuck my shit up for a fraction of 1 bitcoin ;-)
Secure local access shouldn’t really be a problem, but ultimately it will always require a non-zero amount of maintenance. Either from you (if you’re lucky) or the manufacturer (if they’re still in business).
Working off all that Zigbee is probably going to be your best bet. It just works pretty good, but I have yet to find a list of all the basics that always work perfectly for everyone. But most of it is cheap and plentiful enough that you can just try another device if needed.
Some folks seem to get away without repeaters, some don’t. So repeaters and devices don’t seem to be compatible, and that makes the notion of a self-healing automatically optimized mesh more of a theoretical ideal. Start with small test deployments and scale up gradually. RF isn’t easy, there’s going to be glitches. Devices with a graceful fallback are good… every bulb in your bedroom coming on at 3:00AM when the power hiccups may be an acceptable compromise to you, but might not be for the person you’re sleeping next to ;-)
And this has devolved into barely coherent rambling, so I’m out. Sorry I couldn’t answer your question, but hopefully I don’t completely waste your time.
Same. I figured the price would come down over time… boy was I dumb.
Who wants to pay $50 plus for a dim bulb that incapable of making saturated colors?
I found a lot of folks for whom everything seemed to just work… my experience wasn’t terrible but I did buy a few hundred bucks worth of Aqura sensors before realizing they weren’t super reliable.
So I’m kinda glad I didn’t get caught up in the Hue TOS fervor. It drives me nanners when they miss a beat ;-)
Sorry I don’t have real tips.
I’ve been using HA for a years or two now and still found Zigbee stuff difficult to troubleshoot :-)
Sounds like a much more complicated problem… maybe resistive heater would be enough? I’m assuming there isn’t any problem with the cold other than the whole thing icing over.
Better optics/camera is probably where it all falls apart… you’re not getting it out of a pre-made $8 dev board any time soon.
Vast libraries of such disks once existed but we are unsure of what happened to them… but our scientists have identified a solid layer of polycarbonate about 50 feet down from the planets surface that may extend for miles.