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  3. Fewer home automation postings? What's behind it?

Fewer home automation postings? What's behind it?

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  • Sergio RiusS Offline
    Sergio RiusS Offline
    Sergio Rius
    wrote on last edited by Sergio Rius
    #41

    In my opinion, and a way to leave this topic, I find the project is a bit uncoordinated. (There are some brilliant people there. That's out question)

    I mean, we have the mysensors library, that needs slight configuration when used in nodes. But definitely one must set some things, as channel. (Other things are part of the hardware)
    Then is signing and encryption. And it's understanding and use is not trivial.
    Then nodemanager and mysbootloader.
    Every "module" by its own.

    The bootloader has the ability to rewrite the program in the node. It could be feasible to parametrize security and operation settings (in EEPROM?) and the bootloader set them initially only requiring radio settings being hard coded.
    And those ones could be added as parameters to bootloader compilation.

    That should make something more useable. But someone must have already thought about it. I'm not that clever.

    I've already started some interesting things myself, but always abandon them by fear of project changing paths , little time to invest at the right moment, or simply not being a popular contributor.

    I'm a .net programmer and been waiting the opportunity to do something for emby in this platform. If someone know about the recent "changes" in that project, will understand my sadness. So when I saw a not so friendly project I start to fear.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • rejoe2R Offline
      rejoe2R Offline
      rejoe2
      wrote on last edited by
      #42

      @alowhum
      Some more personal remarks (hard to do in english, to be honest):

      Reading your postings wrt. to the DS18B20 things and your enhancement proposals, I can somehow understand about your frustration. (The DS18B20 and BME280 I also use, so this is a part I can follow to some extend, other than a lot of other hardware you mentioned). I also suffered from changes in the libs that made it not to easy to get things going (routines from "the outer world" becoming private and so on). And some of the comments on your code in the mentioned thread are rather hard to understand or interpret.
      As I also did one pull request in the past, I also know how high one's frustration tolerance has to be just to get through the necessary organisational process (including copyright questions and so on).

      But: this is necessary stuff to go through... And the devs here are really doing a great job in quality assurance - at least imo.. But to be honest: It also took me quite a lot of time to find out, how difficult it in fact is to choose the right compromise between a lot of aspects.

      Just one example: Your last proposal wrt. to temperature was to use BME280 as a future standard. Did you ever use more than 2 temp sensors on one node? Most likely not, as this is more or less only possible using the 1wire protocoll (I have around 25 of them on 3 nodes using 7 Pins as data lines).
      And BME280: Try to compile the last version of the lib for ATMega328: It's broken... And the lib consumes way more memory (ok, to be honest: most likely most is for doing forecast calculations).
      So please keep two things in mind:

      • The two of us just see a small part of the world and are just about to start understanding how things really fit together. So going just one step after the next is best way to do. Don't be to eager, good ideas will find their way in the MySensors or Arduino code base.
      • There are a lot of forums around, but only a few have the spirit you find here: If you ask your questions, you will most likely get a friendly answer that could bring your project forward!

      So a big thank you to all the devs and mods around here! Great job!

      Controller: FHEM; MySensors: 2.3.1, RS485,nRF24,RFM69, serial Gateways

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • gohanG Offline
        gohanG Offline
        gohan
        Mod
        wrote on last edited by
        #43

        Examples based on external libraries are also difficult to maintain as libraries change over time and after some months sketches could fail to compile. Personally I'd prefer SHT31 over BME280 because of accuracy and the internal heater to dry up the humidity sensors to get more precise readings.
        Unfortunately working with nodes at this level it is not for beginners IMHO, you need some skills especially when it comes to debug problems: if you are not able to fix come compilation errors and understand how to debug a complex nodes network, you will eventually get stuck sooner or later.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • scalzS Offline
          scalzS Offline
          scalz
          Hardware Contributor
          wrote on last edited by scalz
          #44

          Not always easy to find time
          I just can say there are a lot of ideas, work in progress etc by MySensors team. to improve user experience, but I can't tell you more :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

          @alowhum
          maybe, you could:

          • publish articles, howtos on openhardware or the forum so it could be easily linked in mysensors.org, and get feedbacks from the community etc
          • PR on github when possible, there is a dedicated repo for mysensors sketch too
          • do your own website, or blog etc where you would share your xp. sure why not

          there are pros and cons I imagine. in each case you'll help people ;)

          Sergio RiusS 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • scalzS scalz

            Not always easy to find time
            I just can say there are a lot of ideas, work in progress etc by MySensors team. to improve user experience, but I can't tell you more :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

            @alowhum
            maybe, you could:

            • publish articles, howtos on openhardware or the forum so it could be easily linked in mysensors.org, and get feedbacks from the community etc
            • PR on github when possible, there is a dedicated repo for mysensors sketch too
            • do your own website, or blog etc where you would share your xp. sure why not

            there are pros and cons I imagine. in each case you'll help people ;)

            Sergio RiusS Offline
            Sergio RiusS Offline
            Sergio Rius
            wrote on last edited by Sergio Rius
            #45

            @scalz said in Fewer home automation postings? What's behind it?:

            I can't tell you more :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

            Yes, that's what I was referring to. But anyways, I should be ignored again.

            Edit: definitely should.

            tbowmoT 1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • NeverDieN Offline
              NeverDieN Offline
              NeverDie
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #46

              Intended as constructive criticism: I think more expressive diagnostics would go a long way toward helping newcomers troubleshoot what's going wrong with their particular situation. The serial output is cryptic to the uninitiated, and although there is a log parser, it seems incomplete and probably not very illuminating to newcomers.

              Toward that end: I was very intrigued by someone's recent posted project that was a kind of connection "doctor" that would help diagnose. Seemed like it had a lot of potential and might even buttress the above. Anyone tried it?

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • Sergio RiusS Sergio Rius

                @scalz said in Fewer home automation postings? What's behind it?:

                I can't tell you more :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

                Yes, that's what I was referring to. But anyways, I should be ignored again.

                Edit: definitely should.

                tbowmoT Offline
                tbowmoT Offline
                tbowmo
                Admin
                wrote on last edited by
                #47

                @sergio-rius

                there can be certain things preventing one disclosing projects.. Most of it is probably the fear of getting swarmed by requests about progress of the project, since it is so awesome that people just can't wait for it :)

                Do remember, that we are all here using our (limited) sparetime, and have a lot of other activities going on as side projects as well.. For my part, I have about 1 hour a day during the evening, that I can devote to "Me time", that is for mysensors and all the other projects that I work on. And also trying to learn new skills, that could be useful for my daytime job :). And I do have way too many projects rolling at the moment.. :) And I know that @scalz is not on the lazy side as well, when it comes to fun projects that take up his time.. :)

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • Sergio RiusS Offline
                  Sergio RiusS Offline
                  Sergio Rius
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #48

                  Of course, projects are always difficult to manage and often they must be completely flipped like an omelet.
                  But what seems recurrent is that only a small group of people knows whats the next step in development. So someone starts doing anything and by the time he wants to pr discovers that the sources had changed path and what he has done, now doesn't make sense. Or simply, opinions and ideas are ignored as they happen to be incompatible or undesirable for the (secret) idea of the project.
                  I think is something inherent with open source projects. But sometimes is discouraging.
                  I think it may be solutions for publishing wanted changes and preventing people annoying developers.
                  I would like a future where desired functionalities would be published in a list and anyone could sign for doing them.

                  Sorry if words look rough, I assure is not intended, I still have problems with the english.

                  rejoe2R 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDie
                    Hero Member
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #49

                    It's hard to complain if the price is "free." ;)

                    Sergio RiusS 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Sergio RiusS Sergio Rius

                      Of course, projects are always difficult to manage and often they must be completely flipped like an omelet.
                      But what seems recurrent is that only a small group of people knows whats the next step in development. So someone starts doing anything and by the time he wants to pr discovers that the sources had changed path and what he has done, now doesn't make sense. Or simply, opinions and ideas are ignored as they happen to be incompatible or undesirable for the (secret) idea of the project.
                      I think is something inherent with open source projects. But sometimes is discouraging.
                      I think it may be solutions for publishing wanted changes and preventing people annoying developers.
                      I would like a future where desired functionalities would be published in a list and anyone could sign for doing them.

                      Sorry if words look rough, I assure is not intended, I still have problems with the english.

                      rejoe2R Offline
                      rejoe2R Offline
                      rejoe2
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #50

                      @sergio-rius You know about the MySenors roadmap? It's open visible to everybody here: https://github.com/mysensors/MySensors/projects. Aint't that the sort of "list" you were thinking of?

                      Not being part of the dev community, but most likely there are no "hidden side projects", so in case you have additional ideas for the roadmap, feel free to open an issue on github ;-) .

                      But most likely we are far OT by now here.

                      Controller: FHEM; MySensors: 2.3.1, RS485,nRF24,RFM69, serial Gateways

                      Sergio RiusS 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • NeverDieN NeverDie

                        It's hard to complain if the price is "free." ;)

                        Sergio RiusS Offline
                        Sergio RiusS Offline
                        Sergio Rius
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #51

                        @neverdie If you are referring to me, no. I'm not complaining. Just wanting to contribute but I'm to slow to take the train in time. Sorry if seemed anything else.

                        rejoe2R 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • rejoe2R rejoe2

                          @sergio-rius You know about the MySenors roadmap? It's open visible to everybody here: https://github.com/mysensors/MySensors/projects. Aint't that the sort of "list" you were thinking of?

                          Not being part of the dev community, but most likely there are no "hidden side projects", so in case you have additional ideas for the roadmap, feel free to open an issue on github ;-) .

                          But most likely we are far OT by now here.

                          Sergio RiusS Offline
                          Sergio RiusS Offline
                          Sergio Rius
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #52

                          @rejoe2 No, I didn't see this. Been out more than a year by an accident and I'm still getting used to all the changes.
                          Thanks!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Sergio RiusS Sergio Rius

                            @neverdie If you are referring to me, no. I'm not complaining. Just wanting to contribute but I'm to slow to take the train in time. Sorry if seemed anything else.

                            rejoe2R Offline
                            rejoe2R Offline
                            rejoe2
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #53

                            @sergio-rius Sorry for the somehow misleading referer: Meant was : "Me not beeing ..."

                            Controller: FHEM; MySensors: 2.3.1, RS485,nRF24,RFM69, serial Gateways

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • alexsh1A Offline
                              alexsh1A Offline
                              alexsh1
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #54

                              Just my 2 cents
                              What @NeverDie is saying is true - it may be seasonal or just a decline trend very hard to say.
                              I do see this across all HA forums.
                              Firstly, a normal temp/hum node is not exciting any more - it has to be more intellegent. Like Alexa, please tell me ...
                              Another thing is that generally with social media development, I did notice a lot of forums activity has declined or simply stopped.

                              Let’s not forget that there are many plug and plug HA solutions and DIY may not appeal to all people

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • gohanG Offline
                                gohanG Offline
                                gohan
                                Mod
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #55

                                DIY in HA requires a lot of skills to be put together: I don't know many people with programming background, electronics, soldering, electrical work, computers, networking and so on. In addition if you start looking at machine learning to make stuff actually smart, that would kill everyone enthusiasm :sweat_smile:

                                Sergio RiusS alexsh1A 2 Replies Last reply
                                1
                                • gohanG gohan

                                  DIY in HA requires a lot of skills to be put together: I don't know many people with programming background, electronics, soldering, electrical work, computers, networking and so on. In addition if you start looking at machine learning to make stuff actually smart, that would kill everyone enthusiasm :sweat_smile:

                                  Sergio RiusS Offline
                                  Sergio RiusS Offline
                                  Sergio Rius
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #56

                                  @gohan +1 to that.

                                  My father was electrician and tought me something. I'm programmer and I also do lots of database and network design and management... And I can assure you that combining skills needed for today's ha development is not trivial.

                                  It's because microcontrollers language and flashing methods. If powerful and efficient ones that could run any Java or lua like language, loaded through simple Bluetooth were developed, the situation would radically change.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • gohanG gohan

                                    DIY in HA requires a lot of skills to be put together: I don't know many people with programming background, electronics, soldering, electrical work, computers, networking and so on. In addition if you start looking at machine learning to make stuff actually smart, that would kill everyone enthusiasm :sweat_smile:

                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #57

                                    @gohan That's true, but I am talking about "Wow" factor. Remember the first iPhone? When I got my first iPhone 4, it was quite something. Now, I am looking at the same phone and saying how come I liked it? The same is here. 5 years ago a remote temperature sensor was - WOW! Now, this is just a sensor. I am sure you have plenty of these around.

                                    The question is what incentives newbies have to learn all those skills you mentioned vs plug&play devices available where no learning/DIY is required. There is a video on the youtube about a guy doing DIY mobile iPhone from components in China upgrading a flash memory from 16Gb to 128Gb just to prove that this can be done.

                                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leFuF-zoVzA

                                    Sergio RiusS 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • gohanG Offline
                                      gohanG Offline
                                      gohan
                                      Mod
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #58

                                      sure sonoff e xiaomi devices are indeed cheap and ready to use (sonoff allow some hacking though) and in fact they allow to do some DIY HA for less skilled people

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • alexsh1A alexsh1

                                        @gohan That's true, but I am talking about "Wow" factor. Remember the first iPhone? When I got my first iPhone 4, it was quite something. Now, I am looking at the same phone and saying how come I liked it? The same is here. 5 years ago a remote temperature sensor was - WOW! Now, this is just a sensor. I am sure you have plenty of these around.

                                        The question is what incentives newbies have to learn all those skills you mentioned vs plug&play devices available where no learning/DIY is required. There is a video on the youtube about a guy doing DIY mobile iPhone from components in China upgrading a flash memory from 16Gb to 128Gb just to prove that this can be done.

                                        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leFuF-zoVzA

                                        Sergio RiusS Offline
                                        Sergio RiusS Offline
                                        Sergio Rius
                                        wrote on last edited by Sergio Rius
                                        #59

                                        @alexsh1 Truly, but that's what it's meant to be.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • alexsh1A Offline
                                          alexsh1A Offline
                                          alexsh1
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #60

                                          When I was doing electronics at school, Plug&play devices just did not exist.

                                          There is choice right now.

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