Comment by bethekidyouwant
21 hours ago
But then you would have to configure something on your router and have dynamic dns for remote access and that’s too hard.
21 hours ago
But then you would have to configure something on your router and have dynamic dns for remote access and that’s too hard.
I'm hoping that things like Matter and Thread will help with this, but in the meantime, I have no problem with "optional remote-access service that you don't have to use and have to explicitly enable, or you can use it entirely locally".
Sell an additional $200 box containing a Raspberry Pi with Home Assistant on it and a cheap capacitive touchscreen and pre-configure it with Tailscale. Would be reasonably consumer-friendly. Give it a fancy name and start slapping "{$HOME_ASSISTANT} Compatible" branding logos on partners boxes.
If it's not quite as consumer-friendly as you want it to be, contribute your engineering hours to the Home Assistant product until it is.
Bonus points for giving it 25-250W audio output to power speakers and letting you pair them together to play music in sync across different rooms of your house connected to speakers of your choice.
Market size: approximately zero.
The number of people who 1) really want local-only control and 2) can deal with Home Assistant and Tailscale but 3) don't actually have the skill set to put together a Raspberry Pi or other small Linux box and set up HA and TS themselves is tiny.
The cloud systems are insecure and invasive, but it's really hard to get Normal People to understand why it's a problem. "So someone can tell if I'm not home; so what? I live in a gated community, they can't just drive in at night and burgle the house." They're not entirely wrong about that; it is unlikely. The hard push for subscription services by these companies has turned out to be the best way to push people into locally hosted alternatives, because they don't want to pay for another service, but the usual approach is just to do without the service when they realize that the "smart" functions are not that useful. Most people don't have the free time, knowledge, or inclination to set up and maintain Home Assistant. They can appreciate it when they see it done well, but they aren't going to pay for a professional installation and maintenance and they aren't able to do it themselves.
> The cloud systems are insecure and invasive, but it's really hard to get Normal People to understand why it's a problem.
In the case of HVAC systems the danger is a collective one not individual. Sure if someone really wanted to they could watch you and wait until you're not home then turn your heat off and freeze your pipes. But they're not gonna do that, probably. Instead the kind of havoc they'll wreak with this access is to wait until some off-peak time and instantaneously fire up all the AC units and shut them down simultaneously, repeatedly, causing a huge demand spike. If supply doesn't ramp up fast enough then frequency will drop and then the grid will start trimming off branches to self-correct (or something like that? I'm not a power grid expert someone correct me) and you basically have chaos.
So you don't need to get individuals to care about it, and there's some argument to be made that they shouldn't, or at least shouldn't have to. But the power company damn well should, and governments damn well should.
https://snowpatch.org/posts/i-can-completely-control-your-sm...
I already have homeassistant configured for that. Why would I want a shitty vendor-provided version of it in the cloud?
In that case you would just simply not buy their box and hook up the device to yours. That's the beauty of open interfaces.