The thing with wifi is that it drains a shit ton of energy. A WiFi temperature sensor might last a few weeks or months but ZigBee devices can last years. Of course this depends on what kind of batteries were talking about.
The thing with wifi is that it drains a shit ton of energy. A WiFi temperature sensor might last a few weeks or months but ZigBee devices can last years. Of course this depends on what kind of batteries were talking about.
I myself am a maintainer/main developer of a project and the people that help out in the group chat are a god sent. Takes a lot of pressure out of my day.
True, though on a Swedish keyboard layout it’s much quicker and easier to get to in my opinion.
That’s wat ctrl+a do, go to front. Ctrl+e is go to end. Use it all the time!
Had a look at Louise Rossmans video yesterday about this and from what he showed he got it on all browsers.
I do that all the time. Opens up developer tools on firefox if you do it.
Just bought a Mikrotik LHGG kit for LTE internet and went from about 3-5 Mbit/s down with a TP-link (archer 400 something) to 30-150mbit/s down and much more stable. I’m really impressed with it and WinBox and will for sure have a good look at their switches when it comes to putting up the home network infrastructure. Though, as you said, you need to know what you are doing and need a better understanding of networking but it also gives you a better flexibility and more things that are possible to do.
I’d say my favourite I Like but he’s bearly on any more. Other than that Emily, love the Linux talk.
Yup, all valid points which contributed to me either using ZigBee or designing my own things for WiFi.