The only issue with doing it this way is that the UI to call the script isn’t as nice as calling the notification service directly, but it isn’t too bad to switch to yaml mode and populate the parameters once you get used to it.
The only issue with doing it this way is that the UI to call the script isn’t as nice as calling the notification service directly, but it isn’t too bad to switch to yaml mode and populate the parameters once you get used to it.
I utilize scripts for all of my notification needs. It allows me to utilize logic based around certain criteria, like this on that will only notify family members at home. If no one is home it will wait and notify the first person to show up. This also allows me to be able to quickly toggle notifications for my wife when I’m testing automations with notifications.
alias: Notify People at Home
fields:
title:
description: The title of the notification
example: Laundry
message:
description: The message content
example: Washer Finished!
sequence:
- if:
- condition: state
entity_id: zone.home
state: "0"
then:
- wait_for_trigger:
- platform: numeric_state
entity_id: zone.home
above: "0"
else: []
- parallel:
- if:
- condition: state
entity_id: person.bob
state: home
then:
- service: script.notify_bob
data:
title: "{{ title }}"
message: "{{ message }}"
- if:
- condition: state
entity_id: person.mary
state: home
then:
- service: script.notify_mary
data:
title: "{{ title }}"
message: "{{ message }}"
mode: queued
icon: mdi:exclamation-thick
max: 10
You can use Bitwarden to store passkeys. Not sure if the self hosted solution has support for it yet though.
I have a Lucky Line 71101 keyring that I got 5+ years ago. It flexes to unlock, which makes it very easy to add or remove things to it. Despite it being easy to unlock, it has never come undone without me intentionally doing so. And it still looks and acts the way it did when it was new.
You can create a generic thermostat with a switch and temperature sensor. I do this for my 3D printer enclosure when I needed to keep it warm in my basement with a smart switch and a cheap plug in heater.
https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/generic_thermostat/
I use a Honeywell Z-Wave thermostat with Home Assistant. All local and I not only do I have schedules based on time of day, but it also adjusts the temperature based on if people are home or not.
It’s not like every problem in space is running out of oxygen in 90 minutes. I can imagine plenty of scenarios where having additional resources in the matter of days vs months would make the difference in a life or death scenario. Especially if we were able to establish a decent support network on the ISS or other space stations.
Not to mention you would be able to realistically cycle out astronauts on a moon base, whereas being assigned to a mars base would be a one way trip for many.
I don’t have V-Rising, and I’m sure a lot of this stuff is hardware dependent, but according to a couple of reports on ProtonDB, there might be a kernel bug causing issues with it.
https://www.protondb.com/app/1604030
I just installed bazzite on my LCD Steam Deck this week and it has been pretty solid so far, but obviously the hardware support for it is top notch thanks to Valve. I didn’t have really any issues with regular SteamOS either and just wanted to try something a bit more customizable.
And really Linux gaming on the Steam Deck feels like cheating, especially compared to trying to run games via wine before the proton days.