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Showing posts with label #Chainfire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Chainfire. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 October 2019

What's Home Assistant and why should home automation enthusiasts consider it?


Get all of your digital smart things talking to each other and doing more meaningful things!


Did you ever wish that Alexa or Google Assistant was able to let you have a smart home instead of just a bunch of smart things? It would be awesome to wake up to fresh coffee, have the news playing on a TV or radio, the toaster pre-heated and the temperature adjusted correctly and all the other things we can use smart gadgets to do, but have it do them automatically based on the time you set your alarm clock. How about dimming the room lights, turning on any backlighting on a monitor or display, and making everything cozy when you start playing a movie?

These are relatively simple tasks that should be able to be strung together and just work instead of us having to open 10 different apps and make 10 different adjustments individually. Isn't that what we all imagined when we decided to start having an automated home?

You can, and you can even do a lot more with a good automation hub. And a good automation hub doesn't have to be expensive because you can use the Home Assistant platform on something as cheap as a Raspberry Pi and bring your home setup into the 21st century for about $50.


What is an Automation Hub?

It's a smart appliance that can hook into other smart devices and issue commands that you've setup under the circumstances you've setup.We have a basic example of an inexpensive hub with Samsung's SmartThings. With the SmartThings software you can set up schedules or commands driven by an event (event as in it's cold outside, not event as in a concert or movie premiere) and individual smart devices can work together and be smart like they are supposed to be.

An Automation Hub is probably what you expected from your Echo or Google Home and didn't really get.


The Home Assistant platform works the same way. You let it find all the smart things on your local Wi-Fi network, connect with the ones it can control, and gives you a simple interface to make them act as a group based on when and how you want the single command to trigger. What makes Home Assistant great is that it isn't trying to focus on a single brand of smart products. Most of the gadgets you already have will work, and connecting to network services like IFTTT is straightforward and simple.
It installs on any always-connected operating system that can support Python 3 apps and it's very small and lightweight. This makes it great if you want to use a Rasberry Pi as a small and inexpensive Automation hub.

Why do I want this?

Maybe you don't. It's important to remember that Home Assistant can't control anything itself. It only acts as a master device that can tell other services like Philips Hue or Nest to do something. If you don't have any existing smart devices you won't see Home Assistant do anything. But if you have already invested in one or more smart devices, it's a really great way to extend the features and functionality that won't cost a lot of money.

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Chainfire successfully roots the Nexus 9




Nexus 9-2
Well that certainly didn’t take long. Rooters and modders that have expressed interest in the extremely new Nexus 9 will be pleased to know that superuser guru Chainfire has already successfully managed to root Android Lollipop running on the Nexus 9.
Considering that the factory images for Android 5.0 were only just released a few hours ago, it’s pretty fair to say that Chainfire works pretty darn efficiently. After all, in that amount of time he not only managed to root Lollipop on the Nexus 9, but he also managed to create a 64bit version of the superuser binary as well.
Now for those who can’t wait to get this device rooted (that would be me), there are a couple of things to keep in mind. Right now there is no custom recovery for the Nexus 9. Also, as this is a brand new device running a brand new version of Android, the typical CF Auto-root method is also not yet possible, as the CF Auto-Root framework hasn’t been updated to patch live kernels (which is an Android 5.0 requirement) or to work with 64 bit devices. That means that if you don’t have experience with ADB and Fastboot commands, you might want to hold off just a bit.
That being said, anyone familiar with ADB will be able to root the device in most likely under 5 minutes, as the process really is pretty simple. Chainfire has provided the 3 files you will need to complete the process, which basically consists of:
  1. Enabling fastboot oem unlock via developer options and executing it
  2. Performing fastboot boot inject.img
  3. Performing fastboot flash boot patched.img.
As mentioned before, anyone with a bit of ADB/Fastboot time under their belt will find this process extremely easy to do. Chainfire went on to say that he will get started updating Auto-root with all of the new 5.0 components, but that it would require a bit of time.
Android L brought forward an insane amount of changes, and considering that 64 bit support came with it, it’s no wonder that it took Chainfire “a few hours more than I had hoped for” to get everything working. Rooters should also keep in mind that lots of root apps will probably be very buggy, or may not work at all on Android L until they are updated.
For those looking for the CFAR method to root their device, simply check out the Chainfire thread regularly to see when the update arrives.
With all the great things we’ve seen and heard about the Nexus 9, will you be rooting yours? Let us know why or why not in the comments below.



By "Kunal Vohra", Director@H2K

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