- 133
- 91 451
Home Is Where The Smart Is
United Kingdom
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 25 ต.ค. 2022
A channel that's all about helping you setup your Apple Home (including Siri Shortcuts) and Home Assistant to automate your life.
Tips based on my own experiences in trying to make things do what I want, whilst also not annoying my Family.
Tips based on my own experiences in trying to make things do what I want, whilst also not annoying my Family.
The EASIEST smart outdoor lighting you can do Yourself
My Dad and I now tackled installing some festive along his garden fence. And the hardest part was drilling 200 holes.
We used a 20A 5V power supply and 200 WS2812 fairy lights all wired up to our own WiFi LED controller.
Links to all products are on my website:
hiwtsi.uk
We used a 20A 5V power supply and 200 WS2812 fairy lights all wired up to our own WiFi LED controller.
Links to all products are on my website:
hiwtsi.uk
มุมมอง: 2 276
วีดีโอ
Smart Home devices are getting wild!
มุมมอง 74414 วันที่ผ่านมา
Yes @Sonoff’s latest product release is a little bit different to their usual offerings. Their new BMT01 device has single handedly changed the genre of my channel in this video. Watch on to find out more about it, and as always the link to purchase one is on my website (under Misc on this occasion): hiwtsi.uk #SmartHome #Tech
Avoid WiFi Smart Home Devices
มุมมอง 1.4K21 วันที่ผ่านมา
If you want to know why you should avoid WiFi based #SmartHome devices at all costs, watch this video! And if you want to know which devices you *should* buy, check out the links on my website: hiwtsi.uk #SmartHome #HomeAssistant #Automation #BuyersBeware
I saw one video and decided to make my cooker hood Lighting SMART 💡
มุมมอง 207หลายเดือนก่อน
I saw one video and decided to make my cooker hood Lighting SMART 💡
SwitchBot please take note, your Robot Vacuums will thank me!
มุมมอง 28หลายเดือนก่อน
SwitchBot please take note, your Robot Vacuums will thank me!
If your watch doesn’t record your workout, did it happen?
มุมมอง 50หลายเดือนก่อน
If your watch doesn’t record your workout, did it happen?
Solving First World Problems 🌍 With Smart Tech
มุมมอง 1143 หลายเดือนก่อน
Solving First World Problems 🌍 With Smart Tech
NSPanel Pro updated already + Home Assistant
มุมมอง 3.3K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
NSPanel Pro updated already Home Assistant
This one is for the Americans 🇺🇸 (Sonoff NSPanel Pro)
มุมมอง 9133 หลายเดือนก่อน
This one is for the Americans 🇺🇸 (Sonoff NSPanel Pro)
My kids are going to love their WLED Bed 🚥
มุมมอง 2933 หลายเดือนก่อน
My kids are going to love their WLED Bed 🚥
3 Ways I Upgraded My Protein Cupboard Automations
มุมมอง 2.2K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
3 Ways I Upgraded My Protein Cupboard Automations
WLED works on my smart LED controller 💡
มุมมอง 5963 หลายเดือนก่อน
WLED works on my smart LED controller 💡
CODE PURPLE! Could your smart home save a life?
มุมมอง 1553 หลายเดือนก่อน
CODE PURPLE! Could your smart home save a life?
Light up another shelf with me using my new LED controller
มุมมอง 2134 หลายเดือนก่อน
Light up another shelf with me using my new LED controller
Prime Day products I recommend picking up
มุมมอง 874 หลายเดือนก่อน
Prime Day products I recommend picking up
Remote Control Any iOS Device With Messages
มุมมอง 2214 หลายเดือนก่อน
Remote Control Any iOS Device With Messages
Every shelf in my home will be smart LED lit soon
มุมมอง 1934 หลายเดือนก่อน
Every shelf in my home will be smart LED lit soon
why wouldnt you just make a sequence so that it all happens at once?
@@ganxtah I don’t always want them all to turn on, it’s more of a matter of choosing what I want to happen on a given press
Coolio ❤
Did you try the configuration yaml code that is on the SMLIGH unit in the web interface under 'Z2M and ZHA' menu.
serial: # Location of SLZB-06P10 port: tcp://<local ip of smlight>:6638 baudrate: 115200 adapter: zstack # Disable green led? disable_led: false # Set output power to max 20 advanced: transmit_power: 20
@@toddbarry7303 yeah that was fine. The issue wasn’t with the Zigbee side of things but with MQTT on the server I was using, so I just swapped everything over to the Mosquito broker add on until the other server supports MQTT v5, as the issue was with messages being too large and Zigbee2MQTT ignoring requests to truncate them into smaller messages on v4.
Those wago boxes aren't weatherproof, they are only IP2X rated I believe. You can get weatherproof versions, but they look a little different and typically have seals or a gel insert.
@@BigDDunc thanks for the tip, I think once he’s tested it a bit he’s planned to glue gun or foam fill them or something.
Cool idea. 44 second in what happened to your dad, did he get a shock or nearly fall off the step?
@@Theoriginal1981 Thanks, and just a near fall, we managed to avoid any shocks on this occasion 😉
The persons who designed it did try it. The accountants ask them to change it to something that costs less to manufacture. Hence the wait because it has cheaper parts. Or it was rushed to market while still in beta because of the marketing manager.
@@sylvainmichaud2262 sounds about right
That’s a great idea Never thought about it Good work
Love it, love your attention to detail, it looks so much better
Thank you so much, wait until I post the complete setup later this week hopefully. I've just managed to get around to upgrading the rest of the cabinet lighting and it's SO MUCH better :)
Do you have fingers..to push
@@nielsvvvv yes when I’m nearby, if I’m upstairs and want it to be warm by the time I get there I push the button on my phone with them instead.
So dull Produce a matter switch with vintage rockers
Don't use the provided app, use home assistant. Either using the sonoff intergration which works fine or flash the board with ESPhome and have it intergrate directly into home assistant. You can then create as many automations as you want. If your house is not already using HOME ASSISTANT, it should be!!! =D
@@paws13 oh don’t worry I most definitely am. If I find a reasonable way to get it connected it to Home Assistant I will do a follow up video 👍
Great video, You can turn the water sensor to a contact sensor. Wire it to a relay and it should give you more functions 👍🏻
@@DrHamazani yeah definitely, I use on via Home Assistant to turn a relay on which closes my skylight in my kitchen 👌
Tragic that it doesn't connect via Zigbee or something - seems off-brand for Sonoff
@@iamgigglz yeah very odd to me too. Would love it to have a permanent USB power option and connect to my Zigbee network to report to Home Assistant.
Lmao, there isn't any issue or faff getting videos or pictures from the app. All cause you cant be bothered to press about to clicks lol😂😂😂
Besides reliability, Zigbee will sort of mesh. Some manufacturers will stick to whatever devices they found in range and will not re-mesh with anything else. If you have only AC powered devices and good WiFi infrastructure (multiple well spread out APs) then I would go with WiFi.
My ZigBee network reliability improved as i added more router devices and i also moved my WiFi network band away from the band my ZigBee network uses. I still get some issues infrequently with ZigBee. I also have some zwave devices and many wifi devices, I've never had a problem with any of those devices, zwave had been faultless. Zwave is just more expensive and there's limited amount of devices, especially when compared with ZigBee. For devices that run on battery, zigbee, zwave or BTLE are the best solution, there's nothing wrong with WiFi for devices that are powered like lights or what switches, each technology has its use case. Most WiFi related issues probably come from poor equipment or improper WiFi configuration with overlapping channels.
Do a video on non-wifi addressable LED strips. Extra points if you can do some napkin math for the bandwidth needed to do 60fps effects purely over the air (say, for 10x 5M strips throughout the home) WLED (which I recognize behind you) is almost entirely wifi + has effects built in, but for the future it's going to unlock a lot of wonder to operate pixels in an orchastrated manner over a non-congested mesh
@@JB-fh1bb I wouldn’t have thought it’d be a crazy amount of data, still should be a lot less than even a single camera constantly streaming. Are you saying you’d actually want such a thing, or it’d just be difficult to do without using WiFi? I do actually want some sort of Zigbee variant of a WLED controller, but concede it’s a huge challenge to do without a web UI even unfortunately.
@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs personally I'm hungry for an addressable strip controller that's open and not wifi
@ open in what way? And without WiFi how would you interface with it to tell it what to display? Something hyper simple like a button to cycle through effects?
@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs this is spitballing a wishlist, but: Open means a controller with open source firmware (3rd party or otherwise) and a protocol that's unencumbered by license and patent constraints For interface: a standard protocol. I'd love to see matter here as in the controller can advertise itself as a string of addressable LEDs so any other UI can do brightness, colour. Then extend the protocol to take in a stream of pixel data. Maybe something like starting with the frame rate, bit depth, and colour sequence (GBR, RGB, RGBWW, others maybe even including UV, orange, etc) then accepting the binary stream. The sender would be able to send the pixel data directly to the controller which sends it to the strip
My 2 cents. Had terrible experience with ZigBee. Follow all the guidelines, had devices all over that work as router to propagate the commands, and yet, it was everything but reliable. At huge cost and time, trashed it all (dozens of light switches, sensors, etc ) and moved to wifi. Local wifi (tasmota, mostly) and it works superbly. I agree with the suggestion not to use battery powered wifi devices. They are far from reliable.
Zigbee reliable hahahahaha. Right-o
@@ArtherFocksake if it’s not reliable it’s probably because something, somewhere is not setup right 😉
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIsnope, it’s because zigbee is not strict with compatibility making it a massive pita if you happen to try to use devices from more than one manufacturer. Zigbee is garbage Zwave is miles better, but stupid expensive
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs isn't that always the answer? Sometimes it works and other-times it does not.
@@repatch43 some manufacturers aren’t strict with their compatibility, Aqara comes to mind. Which is why I’ve tried a bunch and recommend based on my experience. And with IKEA, Sonoff, Thirdreality my Zigbee network is great 👍
I was surprised you didn't mention Z-wave
@@Cyberguy42 yeah I’ve not actually tried it myself so not as familiar with it. But it’s definitely another good option 👍
For anything battery powered, wifi definitely is a poor choice. However, i have a few wifi controlled lights and switches and they seem responsive enough since they dont run off battery power. They also use the 2.4 GHz band, which I personally dont use for my other devices and I have pretty good wifi coverage. Certainly better than my current zigbee network.
what if I want to wire my light switches with those smart control boxes? lets say 10-15 wifi based control boxes... would this be an issue? would my home wifi get slower or jammed?
@@walterrldias it really depends on how good your WiFi network is. If you’re just using the router your ISP supplied you might start to notice the connection degrading if you added that many devices to it. At which point you can either spend a lot of effort and money upgrading it (which might be worthwhile for you anyway for other reasons). Or you can just get some form of Zigbee hub and buy Zigbee versions instead.
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs bs, Wifi nowadays consists from several radio frequencies - 2.4 Khz, 5 Khz, 6 Khz. Each pair of them uses different antennas and transceivers on a router side. Smart devices could use only 2.4Khz wave only, as they come on one chip with BLE connectivity. Thus, if you main wifi devices consumes, Wifi 5, 6 & 7 (and supports frequency aggregation)- you would never notice anything - even if the home would have a lot of 2.4 smart home things, they are independent. As sum up, video apply to any WiFi 4 only or lower network, while on WiFi 5+ it wouldn't be notable and Wifi 7 were build for a lot of connections and data transfer channels separation to avoid data transmission congestion.
@@s.i.m.c.asome of the cheaper routers that ISPs supply can struggle as you load up the network with devices. If you swap all your lights and switches to WiFi smart devices the number can add up quickly. I use unifi equipment myself with about 150 WiFi devices online across 3 APs, my WiFi devices are rock solid. I do still get the odd issue with ZigBee though.
@@s.i.m.c.a I think what you’re saying lines up absolutely with what I’m saying. “It Depends”. What you’re saying is that if you have a very well configured WiFi network with reasonably up to date infrastructure then you’ll be fine, and you will… But most people don’t have that.
While I don't necessarily disagree with the points you are making I don't agree with them either. Sure, if you're gonna build a proper advanced smart home, don't build it off of Wi-Fi. But for someone who's not necessarily technical and is just looking for a way to control a couple of lamps from outside their home Wi-Fi is perfect. It's cheap and easy to implement because pretty much everyone has a Wi-Fi router. Now you make an awesome point about Thread, but currently it's a crapshoot! I hope that it improves greatly in the future because if it does it's going to be revolutionary but as of now Wi-Fi reigns supreme for building small smart homes as a non-technical individual.
@@Techlifeandmore yeah I actually largely agree with what you’ve said. WiFi is great for dipping your toes into smart home stuff, but as soon as you realise you’re down the rabbit hole switching to other technologies is definitely the way to go. And I really wish Thread was better too, I went all in on it with Nanoleaf bulbs etc and eventually gave up and ended up with much cheaper IKEA bulbs and couldn’t be happier.
what about up to 10-15 lamps and or devices? still good enough for wi-fi?
@ with your ISP provided router, yeah. If you have a high quality Wi-Fi router like an Asus mesh Wi-Fi system or other high-quality consumer grade gear then you can have like 40 to 50 devices without issues. But at that point if you’re just buying a new network to use smart home devices just use a separate protocol.
@ yeah indeed. I spent a REALLY long time trying to get my WiFi network nailed down so that my smart home would be stable. I have tried Ubiquiti, Aruba, Eero even, and finally settled on some from FS, separate 2.4Ghz SSID for the smart tech on 20Mhz only and the final thing which really helped was getting all my cameras off the WiFi to PoE ones 👌
Does this still work for you with the latest Meta View version? I have auto import turned on but the app doesn’t immediately start importing when it’s launched by my shortcut :(
@@RikAhlberg yeah I believe it does as long as I put them in their case on my known WiFi
Wow that’s awesome, cool channel !
Do you know trick how to run voice chatgpt from rayban meta? Shortcuts + voice command or tap to glasses. Thanks
@@AA-ou4zk sadly not currently since meta don’t give us a way to trigger Siri from the glasses. Only way would be to hold the Siri button on your phone to talk to it via the glasses.
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs maybe something like that: hey meta call chatgpt/ shortcut if call to chatgpt /end call/open chatgpt voice?
I'm not sure if my previous post didn't submit, but this is a great idea to get around a bunch of issues with either regular TRV's or the available smart TRV's from Tado and the like. It avoids yet more battery powered devices, it avoids the whine as a traditional TRV gets close to temperature, and you can integrate them into any routine. Very cool!
Glad you like it 😊 these were all things that were bothering me too, as I previously used the Tado system. And on top of what you mentioned I had occasional connectivity issues, and it was just too damn expensive to buy the necessary wireless thermostats in order to get an accurate temperature for each room. Per room, it’s still cheaper to buy the valve, smart plug/relay, and temperature sensor, than it is to buy a single Tado TRV.
This is wild
@@Hollaback_Youngn there’s plenty more where that came from 😉 be sure to sub to see more of it
Haha, love it!
@@aroundsmart thanks! It’s very useful information to have 😉
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs Indeed!
Great video mate!
@@simonsayshomeassistant thanks mate 🙏 just watching yours, great too as always
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs Thank you so much! This is a great journey!
Android users not wanting to scream their lungs out since they had most if this stuff since android 8 in 2017.
Are you going to replicate this automation for the adults bumper car too?
Adults bumper car?
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs You mean you didn’t get yourself one too?!
@@garethjones5068 not yet… That was me very much squeezed into theirs 🤣
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs 🤣🤣🤣
Shortcuts is seriously underrated
I’ve come here from seeing your package delivery automation featured on Shane Whatleys channel, really cleverly done
@@garethjones5068 oh cool, thanks 🙏 someone commented the other day giving me an extra idea to see if I can tie into any actual delivery APIs, so that’s the next step now
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs well I’ve just subscribed so I’ll see how you got on with it if you make a vid
Genius name for a channel 👌
@@garethjones5068 thanks, sadly I have to give the wife the credit for the name 😂
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIs Teamwork makes the dream work 🤣
not lucky enough, dump enough
@@friedegg1936 ironic spelling there
Genius! How are you passing the Amazon notification to HAS?
@@louisviciedo that’s the one bit that’s manual in the process. I run a shortcut on my home screen when I get a notification from Amazon or whichever courier so that the next ring of the doorbell does it all.
@@louisviciedo Damn you’ve definitely got me thinking about finding a delivery notice API of some sort into this now 🤔
same phone, same scam
i have ios 18 but dont have send later option
@@ohwhatworld5851 you may have to tap More at the bottom of the list and drag it up if you want it nearer the top (should have mentioned in the video)
Just checking it is the small wall one you used as opposed to a ceiling one?
@@stephendevaney8494 I think so, the 30x30cm version, as it’s more than bright enough (way better than their B22 bulb I was using)
@@HomeIsWhereTheSmartIsthanks
Did you say you use the “home” app from apple? If so, are you using a bridge?
@@RW-ql2wy I do yeah, I also use Home Assistant. And bridge all devices into Apple Home with its HomeKit Bridge Integration.
so it's just Ultra1 vs Ultr2 ?
How does the black compare to the natural titanium of your V1? I’m torn between the two
@@shaunfarrell I’m LOVING the black colour, the little orange contrasts look on point. I’m definitely with MKBH when he says “Matte black everything”.
I’m curious of that veiny arm on the left 👀😆
I saw this comment and was very confused so had to rewatch my own video 😂 It’s just the background for my fitness focus, the best black background one I could find on a google 🙈
I bought the controller from Amazon and this video helped immensely getting it set up with Home Assistant. I'd got it all hooked up to MQTT etc and was expecting it to be auto-discovered somewhere/somehow. The trick was giving the first virtual LED strip a name and then it appeared as a device under the MQTT integration!
@@DuncanSmart oh amazing, glad to hear you got it all working. We have some updates coming to the hardware, so when that’s finalised I’ll post another updated walk through.
The first problem is using home assistant. Lol
What’s wrong with Home Assistant?
Ty man really appreciate it
why?
@@callmeem9295 so you can extend the lifespan of your battery. And tweak the sweet spot between daily life and overall lifespan
Giveaway
Does this need HomePod mini to connect to apple home app?
@@jeffrey6577 it will need an Apple Home hub of some kind. I believe that is the case for all Matter devices, they need a controller. So for Apple any HomePod or Apple TV.
IMO, most people (regulators?) don't appreciate/understand the R&D costs associated with developing and maintaining an ecosystem like the Apple Store. The quality of the Apple Store, and development (APIs, etc.) provided to customers and app developers is extremely high quality. But there's a cost to providing an ecosystem like the Apple Store, so yeah, app developers can't expect to have the ecosystem for free just like brick and mortar stores can't expect not having to lay rent for the stores.
Very well put, people say 30% is high. But I say brick and mortar stores traditionally charge way more for rent than 30% of a store's income.