@spacemanspiffy
@lemmy.worldWhy doesn't this exist?
Take dried beans, roast 'em, grind 'em, and brew some bean juice?
I have no idea if it would taste good or not, but we don't know if we don't try.
Edit: I need to see what dried beans I have and maybe go shopping. I will give this a try with a couple different types of beans and report back if I fart or not.
I've wanted a soundbar for a couple years now. Every time I look for one, I don't find anything that meets all my requirements, or I get overwhelmed looking and just give up.
My setup:
What I want:
I'd love to know if such a product exists. Please, internet denizens, give me your recommendations if you have any.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15144957
Can anyone help me figure out Frigate/go2rtc
I have two cameras in Frigate.
One is a Raspberry Pi 3 running Monocle server, and this stopped working in Frigate some time back (driveway). The second is a Galayou G7 (nursery). The nursery camera is the one I am concerned about with this post.
Problem: Up until a month or two ago (I must have ran an update but I don't know) the audio from the Galayou camera worked in Home Assistant. I'd like to get that working again. Some searching led me to try setting up go2rtc in my config.
Here is my config before making any changes:
mqtt: host: 192.168.1.10 cameras: nursery: ffmpeg: inputs: - path: rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1 roles: - detect detect: width: 1280 height: 720 driveway: ffmpeg: inputs: - path: rtsp://192.168.1.240:554/recording/7824851880350319106/replay?trackid=8836591 roles: - detect detect: width: 1920 height: 1080
This currently provides only jsmpeg video in Frigate. If I add something like this to the end:
go2rtc: streams: nursery: - rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1
this adds mse and webrtc as options in Frigate. But, mse plays only video, no audio. And webrtc loads neither audio nor video. I have tried adding lines like
- "ffmpeg:nursery#video=h264#audio=aac"
and also withopus
but to no avail.Finally, if I
ffplay rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1
it loads audio/video without a problem. I'm also able to connect via ONVIF atonvif://192.168.1.241:8899
from onvif-gui.So, something is wrong in my Frigate config, and I don't know what. I'm hoping someone here is a little more familiar and can give me a pointer or two here?
Update: Here is the fix, in case anyone comes across this later:
go2rtc:
streams:
nursery:
- "ffmpeg:rtsp://redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1#video=copy#audio=copy#audio=opus"
webrtc:
candidates:
- <server-ip>:8555
The webrtc
section got webrtc to work in the Frigate and video back in HASS. The #audio=copy#audio=opus
got audio working in webrtc.
I have two cameras in Frigate.
One is a Raspberry Pi 3 running Monocle server, and this stopped working in Frigate some time back (driveway). The second is a Galayou G7 (nursery). The nursery camera is the one I am concerned about with this post.
Problem: Up until a month or two ago (I must have ran an update but I don't know) the audio from the Galayou camera worked in Home Assistant. I'd like to get that working again. Some searching led me to try setting up go2rtc in my config.
Here is my config before making any changes:
mqtt:
host: 192.168.1.10
cameras:
nursery:
ffmpeg:
inputs:
- path: rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1
roles:
- detect
detect:
width: 1280
height: 720
driveway:
ffmpeg:
inputs:
- path: rtsp://192.168.1.240:554/recording/7824851880350319106/replay?trackid=8836591
roles:
- detect
detect:
width: 1920
height: 1080
This currently provides only jsmpeg video in Frigate. If I add something like this to the end:
go2rtc:
streams:
nursery:
- rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1
this adds mse and webrtc as options in Frigate. But, mse plays only video, no audio. And webrtc loads neither audio nor video.
I have tried adding lines like - "ffmpeg:nursery#video=h264#audio=aac"
and also with opus
but to no avail.
Finally, if I ffplay rtsp://redacted:redacted@192.168.1.241:554/live/ch1
it loads audio/video without a problem.
I'm also able to connect via ONVIF at onvif://192.168.1.241:8899
from onvif-gui.
So, something is wrong in my Frigate config, and I don't know what. I'm hoping someone here is a little more familiar and can give me a pointer or two here?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07RR9XBXJ?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details&th=1
I ordered one of these a few months back.
Then I installed it.
Then I realized that this wasn't the same Zigbee Dimmer switch I was already using elsewhere, and that this wouldn't work for me :)
It's now past the return window for Amazon. I have zero use for this.
tl;dr - Me dumb. If you live in the continental US and want this, I will pay the couple bucks to ship it to you so I can get it off my table.
Here is my problem:
Our TV is connected to a SBC running a GNOME/Wayland desktop, where we watch Jellyfin and sometimes Netflix/Hulu through Firefox.
I'd like to be able to trigger pause/play (space button) from Home Assistant, which is running on my home server.
What I am thinking of would be a server/daemon running on the TV computer that my home server would be able to send keys to via a CLI tool (in this case the space key). I am surprised to find that I cannot locate any program like this.
Can anyone provide any suggestions here?
Other ideas:
Update: I got frustrated and coded up a solution: https://gitlab.com/neilsimp1/kbsrv
Hi
As the title suggests, I want to set something up so that while trouble is_open()
, I have a keyboard shortcut that cycles through the various modes listed at https://github.com/folke/trouble.nvim/tree/main#commands.
I see how I can assign shortcuts to jump directly to the different modes, but I want to remember only one shortcut.
Writing a bit of lua to do this is easy enough, but I can't find any way to see what mode it's currently in, in order to write some function that toggles to the next one.
Is there any way to accomplish this?
Bonus question: Is there any way to get trouble to display on screen what mode it's currently in? Such as at the top or bottom of the trouble panel.
This is probably a stupid question, since 2 > 1, but here goes...
I have a home server. It's a ComputerLINK 1U rack server I bought off eBay some years back. It has 2 CPUs, Intel Xeon E5645 2.4Ghz(https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/48768/intel-xeon-processor-e5645-12m-cache-2-40-ghz-5-86-gt-s-intel-qpi.html). It also has two 750W power supplies, but I have one unplugged. It also has RAM and 5 HDDs.
I also have the guts of my old desktop PC. The CPU is an AMD FX8350 4Ghz(https://www.amd.com/en/products/cpu/fx-8350). The motherboard is some ASUS model, I forget and don't want to check right now. A potential PSU would be 500-600W range.
My question: I am considering moving to use my old PC parts as a new home server. One benefit is to cut down on the noise (rack mount PC fans are LOUD). But the real gain I would want is on power savings. So, if RAM and the multiple HDDs all stay the same, but I moved them to the AMD/ASUS CPU/motherboard, can anyone definitively say this will be more power-efficient?
I am not very knowledgeable when it comes to electrics or power consumption, and am just looking for someone to confirm for me. I am aware that the AMD CPU still isn't an excellent choice for an always-on machine, but it could be an improvement.
I have a Scarlett Solo and I have found that with the linux-rt kernel, I get no noticeable latency recording audio, whereas there's a few ms delay on the main linux kernel.
I am able to run other applications and play games just fine on linux-rt. Is there any reason not to just make this my default?
The thing i said in the title