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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)B
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33
Joined
3 mo. ago

  • Microphone is certainly an interesting choice I hadn't thought of before at all. It's something I can test easily, I'll have to see how well it plays with music too. I'll give it a shot

  • Good ideas, let's see

    motion sensor on top of your shower

    That'll detect my shower area motion not when shower in on. When I am cleaning the shower or sitting in a bathtub I don't want mood lighting or other automations to be triggered.

    trying to detect the vibration of the water flow

    Vibration sensor can work but it's a ceiling shower so I'll have to see if I have enough space. This is the closest to a viable solution given my situation.

    a simple switch that you hit before you get into the shower

    Yeah that's a fallback option, but I try to automate my home whenever I can and not perform manual tasks. I know my groggy morning self is forgetting to even hit this simple switch.

  • Nah, if you're going to respawn anyway, might as well try to improve this life the best you can. Even if you fail, it's fine, you can always retry. I agree though that people with debilitating disability or disease would likely retry.

  • That kind of blows, I'm blessed with an ISP who doesn't discriminate against power users and I get it gor relatively cheap (~$15 per month)

  • Can you not buy a static IP address from them? It's inexpensive

  • So this isn't adjusted for PPP. Obviously countries like Norway where wages are high and the currency is stronger than the dollar will have a higher cost

  • Is this adjusted for PPP?

  • Important to note ADB is still unaffected

  • Why would a computer automatically process QR codes? Detecting a QR code and reading one are totally different.

  • It's not universal. It has become more common, but there is no OS-level enforcement

  • The one thing Apple has done an amazing job of over the years is providing a solid, clean, common application framework for all of their systems.

    iOS doesn't even have a universal back button, every app has their own way of implementing it.

  • Yeah I agree! In general, a product should be either software or hardware, and companies shouldn't have say on the other one. If you're selling hardware (phone, TV, computer) you have no right to lock the software. If you're selling software (apps, games), you have no right to lock it to a specific hardware.