The article said that they are the major shareholder.
Depending. But yes. A lot of the time they go the long way around, and head out to some server and back to your local network.
If the internet is down, or the vendor shits off the server, the device stops working.
Home assistant is attempting to localise everything, and get different vendors devices to work together.
Note, for your hass install, it can be installed on any server. Though I am using the green device
That was really interest.
You could hear the excitement in their post!
I have seen these balls on power lines in Western Australia for decades, and literally only just found out what they were.
They are used (maybe among other things) to understand exactly where a fault has occurred in a mlln outage.
They give you sensor data between substations, and allow the grid operator to better isolate the fault and restore power to the largest possible area, without reenergising the fault.
They use parasitic power transfer to be totally disconnected from any dedicated power supply.
Very cool
Its late... what why 63?
Goes to 3 servos. Pays 11, gets 30 back
Up vote for saying bouy correctly!
There Is a tool that someone built directly to scan images uploaded to lemmy for CSAM.
It is really quite clever. The image is put through a ML/AI model, which describes it (Imange to text), then the text is reviewed against a set of rules to see if it has the hallmarks of CSAM. If it does, it is deleted.
This is fully self hosted.
What I like is that it avoids the trauma of a person having to see those sort of things
Would be cool to do this for any particular area.
Draw a bounding box and see how you go
Lightning that travels from the ground to the sky is just freaky.
I think they are now x-cretes
hoping that this is the start of a collapse across a bunch of defensive lines
Definitely judging book by covers. But entertaining read never the less