Podcasts about hue bridge

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Best podcasts about hue bridge

Latest podcast episodes about hue bridge

Manifest with Tori DeSimone
Products that make my apartment feel like a wellness sanctuary

Manifest with Tori DeSimone

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 51:38


Products that make my apartment feel like a wellness sanctuary. Peace, calming, restorative, nurturing, and safe are just a few ways I want to feel while I'm home! All products are linked below :) SAFETY: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  Deadbolt: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  Keypad: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f Security System: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  Ring Door Bell: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  Hue Lights: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  Hue Bridge: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b3f80d5409697d60242ac11001f  HEALTH: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  Wooden Cutting Boards: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  Glass Tupperware: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  Glass Water Pitcher: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  Glass Spice Jars: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  Matcha: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d Matcha Mixing Bowls:  https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b40827f82bba9720242ac11001d  WELLNESS: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b41231f5189ad040242ac110024  Patio/Balcony Furniture: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b41231f5189ad040242ac110024  Outdoor Rug: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b41231f5189ad040242ac110024  Outdoor lights: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b41231f5189ad040242ac110024 Greenery: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b41231f5189ad040242ac110024  CLEANING: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b416fb5d87aaea30242ac110027  Branch Basics Starter Kit: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone/productsets/11ef5b416fb5d87aaea30242ac110027  Watch Manifest with Tori DeSimone on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@manifestwithtoridesimone  Listen to my NEW PODCAST, Let Me Call my Mom!!: https://spoti.fi/3xUas5J  *New Episodes every Friday!* Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJFiEJ_Gk8Q2MYWEON_TLiw/  Listen to Manifest with Tori DeSimone on Apple Podcasts and rate 5 Stars! https://podcasts.apple.com/gr/podcast/manifest-with-tori-desimone/id1462579812  Listen to Manifest with Tori DeSimone on Spotify and rate 5 Stars! https://open.spotify.com/show/5Efqq0renJcUzsdBN9jfoH?si=215a699dff1e4871 Watch Tori's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@toridesimone  Follow Tori on Instagram: @toristerling_ Follow Tori on Tik Tok: @toridesimone_ Shop Tori's Favorites on LTK: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/Toridesimone  Listeners of this show will get a SEVENTY-FIVE DOLLAR SPONSORED JOB CREDIT to get your jobs more visibility at https://indeed.com/manifest. Go to https://boncharge.com/MANIFEST and use coupon code MANIFEST to save 15%. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Hacker Public Radio
HPR4099: Introducing Home Automation and Home Assistant

Hacker Public Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024


Home Automation, The Internet of things. This is the first episode in a new series called Home Automation. The series is open to anyone and I encourage everyone to contribute. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_automation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Home automation or domotics is building automation for a home. A home automation system will monitor and/or control home attributes such as lighting, climate, entertainment systems, and appliances. It may also include home security such as access control and alarm systems. The phrase smart home refers to home automation devices that have internet access. Home automation, a broader category, includes any device that can be monitored or controlled via wireless radio signals, not just those having internet access. When connected with the Internet, home sensors and activation devices are an important constituent of the Internet of Things ("IoT"). A home automation system typically connects controlled devices to a central smart home hub (sometimes called a "gateway"). The user interface for control of the system uses either wall-mounted terminals, tablet or desktop computers, a mobile phone application, or a Web interface that may also be accessible off-site through the Internet. Now is the time I tried this out a few years ago, but after a lot of frustration with configuration of esp32 arduinos, and raspberry pi's I left it be. Recently inspired by colleagues in work, I decided to get back into it and my initial tests show that the scene has much improved over the years. Youtube Playlist The Hook Up, RSS Home Automation Guy, RSS Everything Smart Home, RSS Smart Solutions for Home, RSS Smart Home Circle, RSS Smart Home Junkie, RSS Home Assistant The first thing we'll need is something to control it all. Something will allow us to control our homes without requiring the cloud. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Assistant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Home Assistant is free and open-source software for home automation, designed to be an Internet of things (IoT) ecosystem-independent integration platform and central control system for smart home devices, with a focus on local control and privacy. It can be accessed through a web-based user interface, by using companion apps for Android and iOS, or by voice commands via a supported virtual assistant, such as Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa, and their own "Assist" (built-in local voice assistant). The Home Assistant software application is installed as a computer appliance. After installation, it will act as a central control system for home automation (commonly called a smart home hub), that has the purpose of controlling IoT connectivity technology devices, software, applications and services from third-parties via modular integration components, including native integration components for common wireless communication protocols such as Bluetooth, Thread, Zigbee, and Z-Wave (used to create local personal area networks with small low-power digital radios). Home Assistant as such supports controlling devices and services connected via either open and proprietary ecosystems as long they provide public access via some kind of Open API or MQTT for third-party integrations over the local area network or the Internet. Information from all devices and their attributes (entities) that the application sees can be used and controlled from within scripts trigger automation using scheduling and "blueprint" subroutines, e.g. for controlling lighting, climate, entertainment systems and home appliances. Summary Original author(s): Paulus Schoutsen Developer(s): Home Assistant Core Team and Community Initial release: 17 September 2013 Repository: https://github.com/home-assistant Written in: Python (Python 3.11) Operating system: Software appliance / Virtual appliance (Linux) Platform: ARM, ARM64, IA-32 (x86), and x64 (x86-64) Type: Home automation, smart home technology, Internet of things, task automator License: Apache License (free and open-source) Website: https://www.home-assistant.io The following is taken from the Concepts and terminology on the Home Assistant website. It is reproduced here under the creative commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License Integrations Integrations are pieces of software that allow Home Assistant to connect to other software and platforms. For example, a product by Philips called Hue would use the Philips Hue term integration and allow Home Assistant to talk to the hardware controller Hue Bridge. Any Home Assistant compatible term devices connected to the Hue Bridge would appear in Home Assistant as devices. For a full list of compatible term integrations, refer to the integrations documentation. Once an term integration has been added, the hardware and/or data are represented in Home Assistant as devices and entities. Entities Entities are the basic building blocks to hold data in Home Assistant. An term entity represents a term sensor, actor, or function in Home Assistant. Entities are used to monitor physical properties or to control other term entities. An term entity is usually part of a term device or a term service. Entities have term states. Devices Devices are a logical grouping for one or more term entities. A term device may represent a physical term device, which can have one or more sensors. The sensors appear as entities associated with the term device. For example, a motion sensor is represented as a term device. It may provide motion detection, temperature, and light levels as term entities. Entities have states such as detected when motion is detected and clear when there is no motion. Devices and entities are used throughout Home Assistant. To name a few examples: Dashboards can show a state of an term entity. For example, if a light is on or off. An automation can be triggered from a state change on an term entity. For example, a motion sensor entity detects motion and triggers a light to turn on. A predefined color and brightness setting for a light saved as a scene. Areas An area in Home Assistant is a logical grouping of term devices and term entities that are meant to match areas (or rooms) in the physical world: your home. For example, the living room area groups devices and entities in your living room. Areas allow you to target service calls at an entire group of devices. For example, turning off all the lights in the living room. Locations within your home such as living room, dance floor, etc. Areas can be assigned to term floors. Areas can also be used for automatically generated cards, such as the Area card. Automations A set of repeatable term actions that can be set up to run automatically. Automations are made of three key components: Triggers - events that start an term automation. For example, when the sun sets or a motion sensor is activated. Conditions - optional tests that must be met before an term action can be run. For example, if someone is home. Actions - interact with term devices such as turn on a light. To learn the basics about term automations, refer to the automation basics page or try creating an automation yourself. Scripts Similar to term automations, scripts are repeatable term actions that can be run. The difference between term scripts and term automations is that term scripts do not have triggers. This means that term scripts cannot automatically run unless they are used in an term automations. Scripts are particularly useful if you perform the same term actions in different term automations or trigger them from a dashboard. For information on how to create term scripts, refer to the scripts documentation. Scenes Scenes allow you to create predefined settings for your term devices. Similar to a driving mode on phones, or driver profiles in cars, it can change an environment to suit you. For example, your watching films term scene may dim the lighting, switch on the TV and increase its volume. This can be saved as a term scene and used without having to set individual term devices every time. To learn how to use term scenes, refer to the scene documentation. Add-ons Depending on your installation type, you can install third party add-ons. Add-ons are usually apps that can be run with Home Assistant but provide a quick and easy way to install, configure, and run within Home Assistant. Add-ons provide additional functionality whereas term integrations connect Home Assistant to other apps.

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast
Podcast #1074: Matter Hubs and Sony Projectors

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 39:20


This week our show really matters! We feature a few of the newly certified Matter controllers and we talk about what projector we would consider if we were building out a dedicated home theater. Plus we read your emails and news of the week. News: Eve Announces Matter Updates for Eve Energy, Eve Motion and Eve Door & Window Samsung smart TV owners just got a welcome image upgrade Philips Hue Bridge is getting updated to Matter early next year Other: Cleaning a Record with Wood Glue Record lubricators & preservatives GruvGlide Amazon Official: Introducing Alexa Voice Remote Pro, includes remote finder, TV controls, backlit buttons, requires compatible Fire TV device Matter Hubs Hub M2 By Lumi United Technology Co., Ltd. The Aqara Hub M2 is a smart home control center. It can be connected with a WiFi or Ethernet network, and supports interaction and connection with Aqara Zigbee accessories. It also has an IR remote control function, which can add and manage the control of different IR devices. The Aqara Hub M2 allows you to control your Aqara accessories more conveniently. It can also bridge the Zigbee accessories to Matter to realize the interconnection of devices between different ecological platforms. Company Website Smart Wired Gateway Pro By Tuya Global Inc. As the core of the IoT connection, the wired Matter gateway is the first gateway released by Tuya that supports Matter. It supports the communication protocol of Cable+Zigbee+Thread, that is, the uplink Ethernet connects to the cloud, and the downlink supports both Zigbee (compatible with the original Zigbee device ecology of Tuya) and Thread (Matter over thread) sub-devices. This gateway has powerful localized management capabilities and high stability of multi-device control. It can be connected to all devices such as home automation, smart energy and home security systems to provide users with an intelligent control experience. Company Website DIRIGERA hub for smart products By IKEA of Sweden The hub is the bridge between your smartphone and your connected products LG ThinQ By LG Electronics Discover an easier way of smart home life with LG ThinQ. With LG ThinQ app, you can manage all your LG smart appliances and IoT devices in one place. More Info … webOS TV By LG Electronics LG Smart TV with Matter support will help users register and control Matter enabled home appliances around the TV. Users can maintain the list of Matter enabled devices around, and control using home dashboard application pre-installed on TV. Company Website Philips Hue Bridge By Signify The brains of the Philips Hue smart lighting system, the Hue Bridge allows you to connect and control up to 50 lights and accessories. Simply plug it in and use the Hue app to set routines, timers, custom light scenes, and more. It's the Philips Hue Bridge that unlocks it all — including Matter. The Hue Bridge will support Matter with a software update, making all existing and new Hue lights and accessories automatically Matter enabled too (except the Hue Sync Box and dial of the Tap dial switch). Sony Projectors Something to Consider for Your Home Theater  Sony recently announced three new projectors (VPL-XW7000ES, VPL-XW6000ES and the VPL-XW5000ES)  which range in price from $27K at the high end and $6K for the 5000ES. All  three are SXRD panels with native 4K resolution. All three use the X1 Ultimate image processing. And all three use a laser light source that should last more than ten years if you watch your projector five hours a day.   A typical projector uses a lamp that would need to be replaced ten times in the time the Sony laser would last. They typically cost $50 to $100 depending on your projector, so over time this adds up! Plus the laser is much brighter so if you want to watch on a larger screen or in a room with ambient light these projectors have the chops to do so.  We have not seen these projectors in person but we have seen the previous versions when we were invited to a presentation at Sony Pictures in Culver City. What we saw at that time was quite impressive and those did not have the X1 Ultimate processor. If I (Ara) were building a dedicated theater today it would include the 5000ES. But only because I can't afford the 6000 or 7000.   

Giga TECH.täglich
Trådfri-Steckdose: Smart-Plug mit Hue-Bridge verbinden

Giga TECH.täglich

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022


Zwei Jahre nach dem Marktstart ist die smarte Trådfri-Steckdose von IKEA nun auch in Deutschland erhältlich. Wie sich die günstige Zigbee-Steckdose auch mit der Hue-Bridge von Philips verbinden lässt und welche Alternativen es gibt, falls euch die etwas klobige Funk-Steckdose zu viel Platz wegnimmt, erfahrt ihr hier.

RSostenido
Google I/O 2021, Phillips Hue Bridge y Musica sin Copyright #Now

RSostenido

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 22:24


Notas del episodio #BreakingNews: Apple Music Hi-Fi, Twitter Blue, Microsoft, Spotify, Twitch, WhatsApp #MundoDigital: Google I/O 2021: Android 12, Material You, LaMDA, MUM, WearOS, Project Starline #SmartHome: Phillips Hue Bridge #MontandoUnPodcast: Instagram Reels, Música sin Copyright y Subscripción gratis o seguir Newsletter Semanal: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/rsostenido/ Comunidad de RSostenido: https://t.me/joinchat/AQaKIj009uw4ZjE0 Mis Redes Sociales Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rsostenido/       Twitter: https://twitter.com/rsostenido     ¡Apoya mi podcast invítándome a un café!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/RSostenido

c't uplink (HD-Video)
Alles Smart-Home oder was? | c't uplink 32.1

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2020


Das Smart-Home macht das Leben einfacher! Oder vielleicht doch nicht? Im neuen c't uplink sprechen drei alte Smart-Home-Hasen über ihre Erfahrungen. Das Smart-Home setzt sich langsam durch. Seien es kleine Installationen mit einem Paar smarter Lampen und einer Bridge oder große und aufwendige Systeme mit über 100 Geräten, die alle agieren und reagieren und den Bewohnern das Leben erleichtern sollen. Mehr und mehr Haushalte haben smarte Geräte daheim. Unsere Kollegen Nico Jurran und Stefan Porteck erzählen im Gespräch mit Merlin Schumacher von Ihren Smart-Home-Erfahrungen. Stefan Porteck etwa, wollte nur ein wenig mehr Komfort beim Öffnen der Rollläden – heute steuert bei ihm OpenHAB auch die Haustür und auf Wunsch auch die Kaffeemaschine. Die Sprachsteuerung durch den Google Assistant kam durch einen Konferenzbesuch – bei dem er einen Google Home bekam – ins Haus und nun will er sie nicht mehr missen. Nico Jurran ist ein alter Hase im Smart-Home-Geschäft. Er hat zahllose Protokolle und Systeme durch und kontrolliert unter anderem sein gesamtes Heimkino per Alexa. In seinem automatischen Zuhause gibt es abenteuerlich wirkende Konstruktionen, die aber seit Jahren tadellos funktionieren. Merlin Schumacher kam über den Wunsch nach flexibler Beleuchtung an das Thema Smart-Home. Aus ersten Schritten mit einer Hue-Bridge wurde später das Projekt c't Smart-Home, welches flexible und datenschutzfreundlich ist. Privat hat aber der Komfort gesiegt und neben dem Google Sprachassistenten ist noch eine proprietäre Heizungssteuerung integriert. Wir besprechen, was gut und was schlecht funktioniert und wie sie die Automatiken in ihrem Heim umgesetzt haben. Dabei geht es nicht um pauschale Lösungen, denn ein Smart-Home ist so individuell wie das Zuhause. Im Gespräch geht es auch um die Vor- und Nachteile fertiger Systeme von Herstellern oder offener, die oft viel Programmierarbeit machen. Diesmal mit dabei: Nico Jurran, Stefan Porteck und Merlin Schumacher

c’t uplink
Alles Smart-Home oder was? | c't uplink 32.1

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2020 60:04


Das Smart-Home macht das Leben einfacher! Oder vielleicht doch nicht? Im neuen c't uplink sprechen drei alte Smart-Home-Hasen über ihre Erfahrungen. Das Smart-Home setzt sich langsam durch. Seien es kleine Installationen mit einem Paar smarter Lampen und einer Bridge oder große und aufwendige Systeme mit über 100 Geräten, die alle agieren und reagieren und den Bewohnern das Leben erleichtern sollen. Mehr und mehr Haushalte haben smarte Geräte daheim. Unsere Kollegen Nico Jurran und Stefan Porteck erzählen im Gespräch mit Merlin Schumacher von Ihren Smart-Home-Erfahrungen. Stefan Porteck etwa, wollte nur ein wenig mehr Komfort beim Öffnen der Rollläden – heute steuert bei ihm OpenHAB auch die Haustür und auf Wunsch auch die Kaffeemaschine. Die Sprachsteuerung durch den Google Assistant kam durch einen Konferenzbesuch – bei dem er einen Google Home bekam – ins Haus und nun will er sie nicht mehr missen. Nico Jurran ist ein alter Hase im Smart-Home-Geschäft. Er hat zahllose Protokolle und Systeme durch und kontrolliert unter anderem sein gesamtes Heimkino per Alexa. In seinem automatischen Zuhause gibt es abenteuerlich wirkende Konstruktionen, die aber seit Jahren tadellos funktionieren. Merlin Schumacher kam über den Wunsch nach flexibler Beleuchtung an das Thema Smart-Home. Aus ersten Schritten mit einer Hue-Bridge wurde später das Projekt c't Smart-Home, welches flexible und datenschutzfreundlich ist. Privat hat aber der Komfort gesiegt und neben dem Google Sprachassistenten ist noch eine proprietäre Heizungssteuerung integriert. Wir besprechen, was gut und was schlecht funktioniert und wie sie die Automatiken in ihrem Heim umgesetzt haben. Dabei geht es nicht um pauschale Lösungen, denn ein Smart-Home ist so individuell wie das Zuhause. Im Gespräch geht es auch um die Vor- und Nachteile fertiger Systeme von Herstellern oder offener, die oft viel Programmierarbeit machen. Diesmal mit dabei: Nico Jurran, Stefan Porteck und Merlin Schumacher

c't uplink (SD-Video)
Alles Smart-Home oder was? | c't uplink 32.1

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2020


Das Smart-Home macht das Leben einfacher! Oder vielleicht doch nicht? Im neuen c't uplink sprechen drei alte Smart-Home-Hasen über ihre Erfahrungen. Das Smart-Home setzt sich langsam durch. Seien es kleine Installationen mit einem Paar smarter Lampen und einer Bridge oder große und aufwendige Systeme mit über 100 Geräten, die alle agieren und reagieren und den Bewohnern das Leben erleichtern sollen. Mehr und mehr Haushalte haben smarte Geräte daheim. Unsere Kollegen Nico Jurran und Stefan Porteck erzählen im Gespräch mit Merlin Schumacher von Ihren Smart-Home-Erfahrungen. Stefan Porteck etwa, wollte nur ein wenig mehr Komfort beim Öffnen der Rollläden – heute steuert bei ihm OpenHAB auch die Haustür und auf Wunsch auch die Kaffeemaschine. Die Sprachsteuerung durch den Google Assistant kam durch einen Konferenzbesuch – bei dem er einen Google Home bekam – ins Haus und nun will er sie nicht mehr missen. Nico Jurran ist ein alter Hase im Smart-Home-Geschäft. Er hat zahllose Protokolle und Systeme durch und kontrolliert unter anderem sein gesamtes Heimkino per Alexa. In seinem automatischen Zuhause gibt es abenteuerlich wirkende Konstruktionen, die aber seit Jahren tadellos funktionieren. Merlin Schumacher kam über den Wunsch nach flexibler Beleuchtung an das Thema Smart-Home. Aus ersten Schritten mit einer Hue-Bridge wurde später das Projekt c't Smart-Home, welches flexible und datenschutzfreundlich ist. Privat hat aber der Komfort gesiegt und neben dem Google Sprachassistenten ist noch eine proprietäre Heizungssteuerung integriert. Wir besprechen, was gut und was schlecht funktioniert und wie sie die Automatiken in ihrem Heim umgesetzt haben. Dabei geht es nicht um pauschale Lösungen, denn ein Smart-Home ist so individuell wie das Zuhause. Im Gespräch geht es auch um die Vor- und Nachteile fertiger Systeme von Herstellern oder offener, die oft viel Programmierarbeit machen. Diesmal mit dabei: Nico Jurran, Stefan Porteck und Merlin Schumacher

Technically Correct
Episode 222: What to Expect When You're Expecting a Second Hue Bridge

Technically Correct

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2020 71:51


Okay. Open Overcast. Tap play. "This episode will begin after a brief message from Tom Steyer..." Wait what the? This week: car dealership slogans, a Peacock gets its feathers, and we mark 10 years of the iPad not being very good.

General Tech
Overclocked TV Stand

General Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2019 100:14


We catch up post-holiday about Damian's smart home config, Hue Bridge issue resolution, Will's new 5.1, and more.

Query
Query 45: The Penultimate Query

Query

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2018 52:20


Mikah talks about the benefits of the Hue Bridge, and walks through his desk setup before he and Stephen dive into iMessage syncing, Apple's Podcasts app and more.

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast
Podcast #833: Hue Lights

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018 48:41


Hue Lights For many home automation is limited to lights turning on and off at prescribed times. Others would like the ability to control their lights while they are away from home. For these people full blown automation is not necessary. There are a growing number of products that will let you do this. They range from smart wall plugs to wifi connected light bulbs. One such solution are Hue lights. Hue lights are not the cheapest solution but from our experience they seem to be the most reliable and have the most options. Hue lights do more than just turn on and off automatically. They also can set the mood by changing color. They do cost more and for that you get the most robust and complete lighting system available.   (Some) Hue Products Hue White and color ambiance Starter kit E26 $199 White and color ambiance LightStrip Plus $89.99 White and color ambiance Beyond suspension light $349.99 White and color ambiance Beyond Ceiling light $299.99 Motion Sensor $39.99 Dimmer Switch $24.99 Hue Bridge $59.99 And many many more! The Brains The Hue Bridge is required to control your system. This is where you can name your lights and setup scenes and scheduling. You are limited to 50 lights per bridge. If you want to connect more lights you can add an additional bridge. Fifty lights seems like a lot, but once you get started you will want all your lights to be Hue lights! You can also connect 12 accessories, remotes  and motion sensors. More about those later. You will need an iOS or Android app to interact with the system and you can set it up to work from home or away. The Hue Bridge will also connect to Homekit, Echo, or Google Home. In our test we controlled the system by voice via Siri and the Echo with no issues. Installation Some people shy away from automation because it can be a bit complicated to get the system up and running. The Hue is straight forward but does require a little bit work to get right. First you download the app on your device and then go to the settings and scan the network for your bridge. Once found you will need to press a big blue button on the bridge. After it's connected more than likely you will need to upgrade the firmware.   Now that your bridge is online you can start to add lights. Go to Light setup and add lights. Be sure that the light has power. Once found you can rename it and assign it a room. And that's it! You will immediately be able to turn the lights on and off and if you have color bulbs you'll be able to change colors.  The lights will also need a firmware update. Our recommendation is to set it up to do those automatically during the day time. They take quite a bit of time. We did an update to activate some cool features but ended up waiting over an hour. If you are patient go ahead and do the update. Otherwise wait a day to start playing with the cool features that are in the hue lights. Performance Make sure you get the Gen 3 lights. The color is better than previous versions and you can get higher wattages. Our test included bulbs, LED strips, and the Hue Bloom. The Hue Bloom is a light that is designed to bounce it's light off a wall to give an indirect ambiance affect. Ours are setup behind the TV and can be synced to what is on the screen! When we set the lights to white we got bright white light. We could soften them up or select pretty much any color we wanted with a color wheel. The app has some pretty cool scenes that we ended up going with since our experimentation was kind of lame.  Ara would take about ten minutes and set something up and his entire family would say nah. After three failed attempts he chose a pre-canned scene and everyone loved it. In the end he gave in and went with it. One of the reasons Ara dropped the VOCOLinc lights is because they would drop the wifi connection and lights would not turn on or they would  stay on when they were supposed to be off. In the three weeks of using the Hue lights they have not failed once! I you want to go just a little beyond automated lights you can add the motion sensors and have lights turn on for you when you walk into your house or get up to go to the bathroom. They respond very fast too! There is also a dimmer switch that can control multiple lights. With this $25 accessory you can easily add a switch anywhere in the house that you want. Hue Apps There are a bunch of apps that add functionality to your hue lights. Some developed by Philips and others developed by third parties. These typically cost a few dollars. We tested an app that listens to your music through your phones microphone and then times the lights to the beat. It mostly works but there is some lag. We also downloaded a $3 app that watches your TV through your phone or tablet's camera and then matches lights, that you choose, to the color of what is on the screen. Conclusion Philips Hue lights are one of the coolest home automation products we have tested. The more you have the more the capability. The only complaint we have about them is the price. If you can afford them it is the way to go!  

Die Technikblase
TB064: Advent, Advent, eine TRÅDFRI brennt

Die Technikblase

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2017 60:49 Transcription Available


Der Technikblase ist ein Lichtlein aufgegangen! Passend zum Advent sprechen wir über (mehr oder eher wenige) smarte Beleuchtung. Michael alle drei Marktführer (Also: Phillips Hue, Osram Lightyfi und Ikea Tradfri) zuhause und plaudert aus dem Nähkästchen: Was funktioniert, was funktioniert wie und wie könnte das bei Stephan zuhause funktionieren. (Tradfri-Lampen an Hue Bridge)rnrnWir klären, welche Grundvoraussetzungen für smarte (oder remote) Beleuchtung bestehen, wie die Lampen mit Alexa, Google Home und Apple Homekit gesteuert werden können und wie auch ihr, relativ kostengünstig, mit drahtlosen Leuchten anfangen könnt. Frohes Basteln!

The Frontside Podcast
077: The Internet of Things Cometh

The Frontside Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2017 29:31


In this episode, we talk about IoT: what's coming, why we're intrigued, and how we've already started it incorporating it in our office. In the next episodes to come, we will be having guests on the show to take a deeper dive into this technology. If you have any suggestions or know people we should reach out to, please get in touch! Transcript: CHARLES: Hello, everybody and welcome to The Frontside Podcast, Episode #77. My name is Charles Lowell, a developer here at The Frontside and your podcast host-in-training. Today, I have with me two other developers here at The Frontside. This is going to be a Frontside-only podcast and we're going to be introducing a topic that hopefully we're going to be podcasting a lot about in the coming weeks and months just because it's something that's kind of grabbed the interest of the office and seems like it's something that needs to be talked about. Hello Joe and hello Elrick. JOE: Hello, Charles. ELRICK: Hey, what's going on? CHARLES: Everything, really. Today we're going to be talking about the Internet of Things and we'll be talking a little bit about how we came to be interested in this topic and why we think this topic is important. Let's talk about why this topic is important. I think that this is a very important topic because IoT is only becoming more and more prevalent. It's emerging from the status of being this niche or boutique or very esoteric technology that's only worked on by a very small group of people to becoming very, very open and available and accessible so that anybody can buy a Raspberry Pi or an ODROID or Arduino and slap some Linux on there and connect it over the internet to a bunch of different things and the space of creative possibilities is just exploding. For me, it's very similar to where we were in the early 80s. You know, I see these IoT devices as being the hobbyist's computers, the Z80, Apple IIe, the Commodore 64 and that the people who are hacking on those things 30 years ago are going to be the people who are now leading the tech space today. I think another big and relevant analogy is web technologies. There was this inflection point where web technologies became very open, accessible, available and the people who were in it ended up being able to ride that wave for 10 years to where we are now. In both of those examples, we had the hardware and the PC revolution where the computation was distributed across a bunch of these different devices. Then over that time, we saw a migration over to the cloud and these web technologies where everything was centralized. Now, I actually think that there's a pendulum swinging back where we're actually going to see more and more computation distributed amongst physical devices, except this time, it's not going to be manifest as a PC. It's going to be manifest as these networks of devices that are just all around us. I really do think that we are on one of those watershed moments where these distributed networks of tiny devices are going to be the big next platform that when you invest in it now, this is something that's going to yield dividends for the next 20 years. I think it's an important topic but I don't think we had a well-crafted thought about it but we just kind of stumbled into the space. I was thinking we could start a little bit by talking about how we got into this and how it captured our imagination. If you rewind the clock to the stone age of 2015, I think it was the end of 2015 and it was Christmas break, that's often a time when people go and they hack on individual projects and Brandon, his project that for whatever reason, he decided to take on was he was really into Hue Bulbs at the time. We had Hue Bulbs around the office and we wired up some demos to control them from a website. He decided he wanted to take those Hue Bulbs and make them so they were accessible from our Slack. He built a server in Elixir because he also wanted to learn Elixir because if you're having fun in hacking around, it might as well pick up as many new things as you can. He built an API in Elixir that talk directly to the Hue Bulbs and the Slack integration that talk to the Elixir API and we actually are able to control all of our lights purely from Slack. We could turn them all on, we could turn them all off. That was great but then as we began to use it, we were wishing that we had control over our lights from our phones. We wish we had control over them through the website. I think, Elrick, isn't that was your first contact with the Frontside, wasn't it? ELRICK: Yes. That was my first contact with the Frontside. I was working on the lights app. I initially started working on just the user interface and bringing some different animations and working on the actual experience and the user story on that side about controlling the lights and what particular things you needed to do in trying to craft a UI around that. That's what I initially started. CHARLES: That was really fun. ELRICK: Yeah, that was really fun. That just started progressing more and more. As you said as we started to think about how could we access these lights from different places, using different devices and then that's how we stumbled into the Internet of Things. CHARLES: And it turns out, there's actually a lot of tech in the form of platforms out there that have been developed to help with this, although I would say that the water are still pretty murky as to kind of the best set of patterns to follow. ELRICK: Yes. JOE: That's hard to find information, especially with regard to design patterns. Since we've been working on this light thing, there's been so many times I've Googled and looking for prior art and found none or next to none. It's very much the Wild West. ELRICK: Yeah, because it's like going from a point where you're controlling one piece of data per se, like you have one sensor that does one thing. Now, it's starting to grow until you can have one sensor that can do multiple things and send it across different types of data and then how do you structure that data, how you capture it, how do you hold that state somewhere and it's one to one source of truth. It's just going to be the Wild West of how do you manage this, how do you structure it. It is definitely growing and changing constantly. CHARLES: I think one thing that is difficult is it feels very much like they're aligned in terms of silos. For example, the Hue has the Hue Bridge, which is capable of talking to the light bulbs and then they also have an API which is under development by which you can connect publicly to servers hosted by Philips to talk to the hues inside your office but if you want to integrate your Hue API like we did with Slack or with your iPhone or maybe some other device that you're trying to control, it becomes a little bit more difficult. You have all these vendors like Nest, MyQ and there's a whole bunch of lines like doorbells and smart this and that and everything and they're very good at talking. They have an ecosystem, this large vertical ecosystem, assigned with each one but actually getting cross cutting communication is a problem that I think is something that we've had to deal with and it's very, very difficult where we want to start having these devices talking to each other. ELRICK: Yeah, that area right there is ripe for innovation. I don't know the names off the top of my head but I know that there are people trying to make a smart hub per se. You can think of it like Jarvis from Iron Man. You buy that thing, you put it down in your house, you tell it all the devices you have and that takes care of all the communication between everything. There's definitely an area there that someone can step in and say, "You know what? I figured it out and here's your Jarvis Box." JOE: We're starting to see stuff like that with Alexa and Google has something similar. That's a little scary to me. I think that the one thing that needs to be made clear is when you're talking about these silos, it's a very good point because we think they're decentralized. We think these things are decentralized but in a way, they're not yet. We don't have peer-to-peer communication necessarily like Hue. They're going to public API but you're going through their ecosystem. You're passing through their lens, so to speak. We think Slack has distributed teams but there's a centralized server where those messages passed through so how do we break from that into full decentralization? CHARLES: Right, I know that's – ELRICK: The Jarvis Box. You could probably have a server at your house that keeps all your data there and then it spits out what it needs to spit out to the IoT server somewhere if they're doing some collection. When you leave your house, to say, "I need that information to come back to my cell phone now." Maybe in the future, you'll be able to control that, either from your house or just send out the pieces of data that you need and the centralized stuff, you can just keep at your house. CHARLES: The whole question of ownership is one that I feel is something that we have not addressed head on. Everybody is just rushing forward with how do I implement this, how do I get it done and it definitely is worth taking a step back and understanding who owns the things that I'm working with and that I'm inviting into my home. I think that smartphones provide a great example of how it can work really well for the consumer. I think certainly, in their inception I think this is mostly true if you have an iPhone. Most Android devices, you actually own that piece of hardware and the things that you install on it are very much controlled by you. I think that Apple especially, gets a big shout out for making sure and putting in those safeguards so that anyone who's participating in the ecosystem has to first acknowledge that the data is going to be owned by the user. I think that's maybe a little bit less true than it was back in 2009 or whatever but I think that there's definitely a lot of thought that went into that upfront, that I worry isn't going into with Alexa. Is Amazon protecting? Is there an understanding that if you're participating in that ecosystem that ultimately, the thing is owned by me? I feel the same way about a lot of these AI and robots where it may participate in the conversation but who is it really serving? Is it serving you or is it a proxy to serve somebody else like a Google or an Apple or an Amazon? JOE: I may just be a pessimist but I think it's safe to say that it's almost always the latter when money is involve. ELRICK: They had some situations arise where the powers that maybe we're trying to get the actual recordings and different things as Alexa is always on. Let me turn mine off because she's going to say, "Oh, did you ask me for something?" I have one sitting right here in front of me. They have been in situations where people had said, "Because that's constantly recording and that recording is going somewhere," and then if situations have arisen, they said, "We want that recording," and then Amazon is like, "No. We're not going to give you that recording because that is private information." They're trying to find a way to get around that and what laws and things are going to come out of this area that we're in right now, it's still unforeseen. But I think that companies that are in this space, know that the future of their company rests on them protecting that data and user data because if you don't, then people will sidestep and go elsewhere. CHARLES: Right. In so far, they hold that as a value. In so far, people are conscious of those concerns. If that's something that people are willing to pay money for, then you've got a market driving force pushing you in that direction. But if people don't care, they don't think and they're just like, "Whatever. It's cool," that's not going to be something that a business is going to roll into their product because ultimately, if people care, then it'll affect their bottom line. If they don't but it won't and they're going to act in their own best interest. ELRICK: True. CHARLES: I do worry that there needs to be a social awareness of what kind of powers these devices actually will end up having over our lives and hopefully, those will guide it but you're absolutely right. ELRICK: True. I view all of this IoT stuff and data is not too far off of what people do on Instagram per se like you have your pictures, you can either post crazy pictures or you can post casual pictures. How you use the power that these IoT devices are giving you is essentially falls into your hands like what am I going to send across this thing. I think that hopefully, the power falls into the user's hands and they empower people with these devices and not make them feel like a prisoner in their own home or car because this IoT things are popping up in vehicles now. If you step into your car, you start talking and your car is listening. If they go from it like the same way we approach our applications and such and say, we're going to empower the user, I think if these IoT companies take that approach and learn from the mistakes that were made in software by not empowering users, then after a couple years they're like, "Oh, my goodness. We need to empower the user." When Steve Jobs was preaching about this in the 80s and everybody thought he was crazy. Don't fall into our mistakes. Empower the users and I think that this technology in this space would just keep flourishing if they do that. CHARLES: Absolutely but it is going to take a generation of engineers to make sure they're always pushing in that direction, a generation of users who don't just wait for companies to hand power to them but demand it. ELRICK: Demand it, yes. CHARLES: Yeah, demand it and a generation of business owners who are going to listen and think about the long game and realize that that's the path to long term health and viability. ELRICK: Yep, even outside of the whole privacy thing where it's like there's too much data being sent out. People are building just cool stuff with IoT that doesn't really send that much data outside of normally that we do. Even on our phone, people use GPS all the time and that is sending data about all your locations, where you are, what restaurant you're at, what bus stop you're at, what bus you're on, what plane you're on and people are building a lot of cool things, just even using that. I saw the other day that someone had a bicycle, it has GPS and lights and gyroscopes and all kinds of stuff in that bicycle. When you're riding, the lights will go off and say, "It's time for you to take a right." It will blink in a certain sequence or take a left. It register your speed and it all comes back to your phone so it's not too outside of the norm of what we do on a regular day. There's people building things just in that sweet spot per se with these IoT devices that are building some pretty cool stuff. JOE: It's a very good point because Slack doesn't have to be centralized. It can be peer-to-peer. Hue doesn't have to be centralized outside of having a bridge on your local network. We don't really need to be phoning home for all of this stuff and if we move towards like a true decentralization, we don't need trust at that point. A company has our best interests at heart if we think about it as your trust ideal to remove the need for involving third party in the first place. CHARLES: Yeah, so what would that look like? I'm going to fast forward a little bit because we were a little bit further along on our journey and we've been experimenting with Amazon IoT services and we've been maintaining our own APIs to control our Hues directly. While they're still going through the bridge, it's not incorporating any other ecosystem but we are still routing all of this stuff through this low level Amazon infrastructure. There's a class of problems that that solves which it does help to have those primitives to be able to access your IoT devices through a firewall, to have them and be able to, at least have a known way to update themselves and distribute software to them. There's these fundamental infrastructural problems but at the same time, Amazon doesn't have any access to that data that's moving through their land, so to speak. What they're essentially doing is leasing you a railroad but they don't have new visibility into what's contained inside the cars. JOE: Do you know that? CHARLES: I actually don't know that because of course, it's through the Terms of Service. ELRICK: Who reads EULAs? They're too long. JOE: I think it's more often than not, people are going to use convenience over privacy. CHARLES: That's true so it is in keeping with what I understand of other Amazon services, which do have those guarantees. I don't know in particular for the Amazon IoT. But let's talk about that a little bit. Let's talk about a little bit about our setup and why we went to using Amazon IoT services and what it provides for us. ELRICK: We decided to use the Amazon IoT platform as a means to allow us to one control the bulbs from anywhere, to get access to them and then also to be able to distribute that change to anything we want. Coming through IoT or coming through their platform, when a change happens, you don't necessarily just have to send it to our one set of bulbs. You can send it to anything you want. You can send it to a phone, to another application somewhere, to a database. It gives you the ability and the flexibility to distribute that change or that state change anywhere. CHARLES: Which is I guess getting at the heart of it is actually managing this distributed state beast of a problem and really, the AWS IoT just helps you get your foot in the door. There are still a lot of cans of worms that are involved once you get there but for the first point that you have said, I want to unpack that a little bit because it's a problem very familiar to us but might not be to the listeners, you've got the set of devices and they come up, they connect to your Wi-Fi and that's fantastic and they can talk to other things on your Wi-Fi, on your local network and can discover services there. But what if you want to control them from outside like I want to send a message from Slack and have it affect the lights in our office. You've got to move through some public cloud to do that because Slack servers are not on our local area network. What you can do then is have essentially one thing that the IoT services provides is your device comes online and it immediately calls home to a generic location and opens up, what is in practice a web socket. You can program in whatever language you want but that's probably the analogy that's most familiar to everyone. It basically connects a web socket that then you can send messages to it in real time so any time I want to connect to that, I can do it and I don't need Hue's API. I don't need Slack's API. I can just talk to one API which is the low level Amazon -- AWS IoT API -- and I can send real time messages to my devices. That's a huge problem solved right there. But it's hard to maintain that infrastructure yourself. We could write our own AWS IoT but then we'd probably host it on AWS anyway. JOE: The real world is not a JSON Blob. That becomes a problem. In college, I took a course where we programmed robots for the majority of it and what you quickly find out is that you can't count on revolutions of a wheel or what have you. The world is imperfect. Keeping a state is one thing but keeping state reflected back and keeping state up to date is where the challenge has been for us. CHARLES: That is right because you've got this highly distributed systems. That's kind of a second class of problems that it attempts to solve for you. You got these highly distributed set of devices but even if the connections are 99.9% reliable, sometimes they're highly latent. You can't control the latency on the connection and sometimes, it fails altogether, which can affect one, how do I even read state from these things. Is the button pressed? Is the button not pressed? Is the light on? Is it off? Is the wheel spinning like you said? Or is it off? These are things that you need to know and then you need to react to those changes like, "We're spinning at 90 RPM. I want to bump it up to 10. How do I get my system to converge on that desired state based on my current state?" It's hard because you don't know all of the demons of distributed state management are in full like they have ripped off their masks and they're roaming about. ELRICK: Yep. I saw them introduced something the other day but I haven't had time to dive too deep into it. It was something called Greengrass that it will continue to gather and allow you to utilize your devices locally and it will keep all that data and then it will do the diffing, let's say when you connect back online until what your old state was and what the new state is and then go about updating everything. JOE: That could be very useful. ELRICK: Yeah. It just got implemented probably three weeks ago or something like that. It's inside of the IoT platform. I just clicked in and they said, "We have a new feature now called Greengrass," but I haven't got time to dive too deep into it but like you were saying, state management is something that's extremely difficult, especially across a distributed systems. They know it's a problem and it seem to be addressing that problem and trying to make it simpler for people and give you these tools to say, "Here are some stuff that you can leverage," and a lot of that is great. CHARLES: I think that's an excellent point and I think that it's also worth mentioning too that there's two sets of state that you have to manage. There's the runtime state, which controls the flow of data as your system operates. Then there's the static state of just what is the code that's going to run on this device. Let's say, my robot or my button that's got V1 of the software, that all it does when I push it, it rings a bell. That's V1. I want to add this awesome feature to this button that when I push it, it rings a bell and it also pops open a Topo Chico from the refrigerator or something like that. The question is how do I get that software from my laptop with that Topo Chico enhancement all the way to my button, which is what essentially amounts to being across the internet inside this private network. In the current state or when you're first starting out hacking, let's say this is based on a Raspberry Pi, I just burn a new Raspberry Pi image with my new software with V2. I walked over and I stick it into the Raspberry Pi and that doesn't really cut it. That does a great job but now, I want to turn this into a business and I want to have 20,000 of these things installed or let's think big like every home in America gets one. Every home in the planet, I want two billion of these type of devices. What happens when I come out with V3? ELRICK: Then you can either go the route of hiring -- CHARLES: Hiring a favor. ELRICK: -- Technical folks to go out, to update all your Topo Chico poppers or have your users struggle to do it or what we did, implement Resin. Let Resin update your Topo Chico poppers around the world. CHARLES: Right. There are a lot of problems in terms of static state management, runtime state management, peer-to-peer communication and problems of resiliency and robustness. I'm hoping that we can discuss these over the coming weeks and months because each one is a topic in of itself. ELRICK: And offline management too. CHARLES: And offline management too, there you go. There's another one. There's a lot to explore, a lot that's unknown and there might be people who have answers to all of these and there might be papers on them but they're buried in weird corners of the internet. I'm hoping that we can fill the podcast with a couple of guests to come in and talk about these different things. ELRICK: Yeah, that would be fantastic. CHARLES: Yeah, I'm really looking forward to it. ELRICK: I started playing around with Watson IoT. It is an IoT service that allows you to leverage the natural language processing and computing from Watson. It's pretty awesome. CHARLES: Wow, that is really cool. ELRICK: That's another space of IoT that we can explore and hopefully, we can explore over the next few podcasts. CHARLES: Yeah, awesome you all. Well, I think that's about it for this episode. Thank you, Joe. JOE: Thank you, Charles. CHARLES: Thank you, Elrick. ELRICK: Thank you, Charles. It was fantastic. CHARLES: And I look forward to hacking on the lights with you guys. That is always one of my favorite things to hack on. I don't get to do it enough but I think we're going to try and have a big throw down on state management on Friday, right? ELRICK: Oh, yeah. CHARLES: It is going to be exciting. It's going to be super nerdy and we'll let you all know what the outcome of that is. See you all next week. As always, please don't hesitate to get in touch with us. You can get us on Twitter at @Frontside or send an email to Contact@Frontside.io. We always love to hear from our listeners. Take care!

Ruminate Podcast
43 - Hunch Over It

Ruminate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2017 23:05


The guys discuss Amazon's new Echo, and The OA Introducing Echo Show - Amazon Official Site Philips Hue White and Colour Ambiance Wireless Lighting E27 Starter Kit, 3 x Philips Hue 9 W E27 Richer Colour Bulbs, 1 x Hue Bridge 2.0, Apple Home Kit Enabled, Works with Alexa: Amazon.co.uk: Lighting Amazon’s new Echo Look has a built-in camera for style selfies | TechCrunch The OA - Wikipedia Contact Us Email contact@ruminatepodcast.com Hashtag #askruminate