whereami
openhab-addons
whereami | openhab-addons | |
---|---|---|
11 | 57 | |
5,088 | 1,837 | |
- | 0.3% | |
3.3 | 9.9 | |
5 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | Java | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | Eclipse Public License 2.0 |
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.
whereami
- Whereami: Uses WiFi signals and machine learning to predict where you are
- `whereami` uses WiFi signals & ML to locate you (within 2-10 meters)
-
Triangulation by WiFi and Bluetooth for presence in rooms?
There’s a project called whereami that runs on Python and uses wifi signal strength to predict where a device is. I’ve used it, it’s pretty cool.
-
What are your proudest python packages?
|---------------------------------------------|------------------------------------| |yagmail| Most popular gmail python library | |cliche | Build a simple command-line interface from your functions | |brightml | Convenient Machine-Learned Auto Brightness | |whereami Uses WiFi signals and machine learning to predict where you are.| | textsearch | Find strings/words in text; convenience and C speed |
- Whereami uses WiFi signals and machine learning to predict where you are
- `whereami` uses WiFi signals & ML to locate you (within 2-10 meters)
- kootenpv/whereami
- 373 points in 4 hours
- `whereami` uses WiFi signals and ML to locate you (within 2-10 meters)
openhab-addons
-
Homeassistant , hubitat or homey?
I used open hab https://www.openhab.org/ for a while and really liked it but had trouble getting it to work with the ZigBee USB stick I bought. So I switched to home assistant and have been on that for a couple years now. Both are solid. I like HA a lot but the one down side for me is I have to pay the 5 bucks a month or whatever it is for the cloud access to control things when I'm not home. Openhab has instructions to set up your own server for remote access.
-
⟳ 0 apps added, 49 updated at f-droid.org
openHAB (version 3.6.0): Vendor and technology agnostic open source home automation
-
How to have truly smart HVAC?
Here's what I did at my house. I don't control based on dew point and I only have one HVAC unit, but you could pull this off with openHAB and Venstar thermostats. Venstar was the only brand I was able to find with a local API to control the thermostat. You can set up rules in openHAB to perform what you'd like. The rule engine is powerful and flexible. I'm not gonna lie. It's probably going to be a lot of heavy lifting to get it going but it's rewarding once you've set it up.
-
Replacement options?
OpenHAB (like Home Assistant; open source, need to run on own hardware)
- Can I modify an amazon echo?
- Need help controlling AC power outlets using Arduino
- Starting out fresh, no devices, what is the Perfect route to create a Smarthome
-
⟳ 0 apps added, 54 updated at f-droid.org
openHAB Beta (version 3.3.2-beta): Vendor and technology agnostic open source home automation
-
Scheduling My Electricity Usage
While I don't care about the whole carbon boogeyman spectacle I do care about minimising our environmental impact as well as dependency on, well, as many external things as I can. One of those things is electrical power so I put about 14.5 kW worth of solar panels on a barn roof, connected to a 10kW hybrid inverter [2]. Since I don't like external dependencies I do not use the supplier's "cloud-based" management feature (*Fronius Solar Web* for those who care about such details) and disallow the thing access to the 'net. Instead I made my own system based around OpenHAB [1], a bunch of ESP8266 microcontrollers hooked up to things like the utility power meter (which has a handy P1/HAN port just for that purpose), a heat pump, a water heater, a small heater in the feed storage etc. The thing gets hourly electricity prices for today and tomorrow and creates a schedule to enable/disable devices based on demand, price and energy production from the inverter. Once I had everything set up it has worked fine without the need for intervention. This does not yet include the washing machine and dishwasher since these devices do not offer an easily automatised interface and because scheduling their use also depends on what we put in them and when we want them to clean those things. I just check the graphs to decide when to switch them on which works fine, no need for more automation.
Our electricity rates - both use as well as returns for power we deliver to the net - vary by the hour. Using the interface to the utility meter and the inverter I get readings every 10 seconds, the inverter also tells me the net frequency so it is easy to see whether the net is overloaded (frequency clearly below 50 Hz) or oversupplied (clearly above 50 Hz).
[1] ...but I have not yet connected a battery since a) we can sell overproduction and b) batteries are still too expensive. I expect battery prices to go down once enough used electric car batteries enter the market.
[2] https://www.openhab.org/
-
[Koreanvariety] Single’s Inferno 2 | Ép. 7 & 8 | 2023-01-03
Openhab3 (Smarthome)
What are some alternatives?
room-assistant - Presence tracking and more for automation on the room-level
whereami - Locate the current running executable and the current running module/library on the file system 🔎
Grafana - The open and composable observability and data visualization platform. Visualize metrics, logs, and traces from multiple sources like Prometheus, Loki, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, Postgres and many more.
cliche - Build a simple command-line interface from your functions :computer:
Home Assistant - :house_with_garden: Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first.
brightml - Convenient Machine-Learned Auto Brightness (Linux)
Navidrome Music Server - 🎧☁️ Modern Music Server and Streamer compatible with Subsonic/Airsonic
diceroll - A dice rolling module for Classic Python 2.5.
hilo - Home Assistant Hilo Integration via HACS
pydocker-cli
whisper - Robust Speech Recognition via Large-Scale Weak Supervision