esphome
ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster
Our great sponsors
esphome | ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster | |
---|---|---|
227 | 15 | |
7,711 | 948 | |
6.5% | - | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
about 16 hours ago | about 1 year ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
esphome
-
A Beginner's Guide to the ESP8266
For the ESP32, an hero is in the process of adding LVGL to ESPHome. You can try it out now: https://github.com/esphome/esphome/pull/6363
Here's the (very good!) preview documentation: https://deploy-preview-3678--esphome.netlify.app/components/...
This is such a game-changer for me that I'll be using the ESP32 over the ESP8266 for any projects involving displays from now on.
-
ESPHome
Solid state relay is probably a bad idea with all the extra heat-sinking, extra cost, and chance of getting counterfeits.
I do this with ESPHome & a J115F21C12VDCS.9 relay (note only the NO side is rated for 40A resistive): https://i.imgur.com/MqqOkoY.png
Choose any of the temperature sensors here for air temperature sensing: https://esphome.io/
Configuration is so easy. For the sensor, just copy the config from here, for example: https://esphome.io/components/sensor/bme280. Add a gpio output (https://esphome.io/components/output/gpio) and a bang-bang climate controller (https://esphome.io/components/climate/bang_bang.html)
-
A Custom Zigbee Doorbell
You might want to take a look at https://esphome.io/ for an easy integration of an ESP32/8266 into home Assistant.
-
Thoughts, learnings and regrets after three years on Home Assistant
You can do this with a $30 Sonoff S31 running ESPHome [0]. Since the Sonoff wall switch can run a ping sensor against your server you could create a watchdog automation right on the S31 to shut off the mains power to the S31 switch and turn back on after X seconds.
There are other ways you could have the S31 do operational checks but ultimately ESPHome is probably an interesting consideration and supported by tons of off the shelf hardware.
[0] https://esphome.io/
-
Fixing a broken smart cat feeder with ESP32
They're pretty great and compatible with most things. ESPHome [1] is a great resource for getting ESP32's working nicely with HA and you can find lots of projects using it to learn from.
You'll likely need to do soldering if you want to connect sensors, batteries and the like.
Personally I really like what SEEED Studio [2] does with their ESP32 boards and they have nice docs.
1. https://esphome.io/
-
How to connect a SwiftUI app to NodeMCU ESP32
Maybe you could set up ESPHome on the ESP32. It might make connecting those components easier, plus a decent web server built in. Then your app can be set up to access data provided by the ESPHome web server.
- Esp32 communication over the internet
-
Adafruit Feather ESP32-S2 with BME280 will not work!
# # Setting pins for sda and scl will be required until https://github.com/esphome/esphome/pull/2970 is released
-
Hey all! ESP32 beginner here, looking for a little advice
Probably an unpopular opinion, but for the simple stuff you may just want to use something like EspHome where you just need to create a yaml file. Once you’re comfortable with that maybe get into something a bit more advanced, but esphome make it a breeze. It integrates with home assistant if you already have that in place as well.
-
List of your reverse proxied services
ESPHome
ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster
- ESP8266 IR Blaster Help
- Software to send IR commands to USB emitter?
-
Esp8266 project box questions
The comments in your Link show that the infrared transmitter is just a LED without any amplifier or even transistor. Your will not be able to drive this reliably over a distance. This is essentially a LED with a resistor. A quick Google shows something like this as solution: https://github.com/mdhiggins/ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster
-
Best smart IR blaster that I can get into HomeKit via Homebridge? NOT Broadlink or Logitech Harmony.
If you're willing to do a DIY project, I built one of these using some cheap components and an ESP8266 board. For hooking into my setup (currently just turns a device on/off), I just installed this plugin, which also allows you to store the state of the device. For what I need, this has worked pretty well, but this may not be for you if you're not interested doing anything on a breadboard, let alone soldering.
-
IR blaster. What are you using?
Where possible, I use HomeKit enabled devices (TV and AppleTV) and HomeBridge (receiver). This allows HomeKit to know the current state of the device (on or off and what input a device is on). In addition, I built a DIY infrared blaster that I found on GitHub. I currently have this all on a bread board and just use a plugin that sends HTTP requests to the device to turn on/off any devices that only work via IR.
-
is there a way to make the esp act as a universal remote? other than being an ir receiver and doing every single button for every single device manually.
This isn’t exactly what you asked for, but maybe it will help. https://github.com/mdhiggins/ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster
-
WiFi Universal Remote Ir Blasters
link to project
- Looking for a way to turn my TV on with voice.
- Can I link a DIY infrared controller with Alexa?
-
What's the best way to automate these remotes. I want certain colours when things happen in my video game (I understand that would be a whole nother thing.)
If you don't have another home control system in place already (harmony, home assistant, etc) something like this is probably the easiest https://github.com/mdhiggins/ESP8266-HTTP-IR-Blaster
What are some alternatives?
ESPresense - An ESP32 based node for gathering indoor positioning and transmitting to mqtt
homebridge-http-switch - Powerful http switch for Homebridge: https://github.com/homebridge/homebridge
ESP-Now - ESP-Now Examples
IRremoteESP8266 - Infrared remote library for ESP8266/ESP32: send and receive infrared signals with multiple protocols. Based on: https://github.com/shirriff/Arduino-IRremote/
Tasmota - Alternative firmware for ESP8266 and ESP32 based devices with easy configuration using webUI, OTA updates, automation using timers or rules, expandability and entirely local control over MQTT, HTTP, Serial or KNX. Full documentation at
irdb - One of the largest crowd-sourced, manufacturer-independent databases of infrared remote control codes on the web, and aspiring to become the most comprehensive and most accurate one
esp-homekit - Apple HomeKit accessory server library for ESP-OPEN-RTOS
templates - Tasmota Device Templates Repository. Your one stop shop to get templates for devices running Tasmota!
tuya-convert - A collection of scripts to flash Tuya IoT devices to alternative firmwares
documentation - 📚 YIO Documentation can be found here
Node RED - Low-code programming for event-driven applications