Hi, i have been using smart lamps from aliexpress for awhile now. But these lamps force me to connect to an android app that phones-home to Beijing. Without the chinese yeelight app, i cannot change the color of the lamps. I find that kind of creepy.

Is there a good smart lamp system that is privacy respecting and hopefully opensource?

One that is locked to my local lan instead of a chinese trojan horse that spy’s on me 24/7.

I’m an arch linux user and i know some basic python scripting.

  • Rand0mA@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Automation. For example, The lights for my entire house are connected to Home Assistant. Essentially a smart home server that will let you manipulate virtually anything you can turn on and off. By using sensors (light levels, time of day, movement sensors) and you can have ‘smart’ lights… so, for an example using these sensors, in the middle of the night if you get up, it detects movement in a room and puts the light on, but because it’s night they are at 30% brightness…

    Another thing you can do is turn the lights on and off rapidly in a room when you’re at work and know the missus is home but hasn’t seen your message. Failing that turn the TV off, turn the fans on, close the curtains and boil the kettle

    It’s a fun having automatic smart lights right up until people use the actual light switch to turn it off and then you have to get up… or the fact that it takes time to get your phone, unlock it. Open the app and change the lights,rather than getting up of your fat arse and doing it yourself

    • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      The night light thing sounds useful, I’ve walked into a half open door on several occasions while proudly thinking that I know my way around the house

      Other than that though, idk. As long as you can manually override it, that’s fine I guess.

      • I’m like the person you replied to: many of the lights in my house are automated. I also have motion sensors in most of the ground floor rooms, and have hooked the had fireplace up to the system.

        We don’t touch light switches anymore. You walk into a room, the lights come on - but only if it’s near or after dusk, and before sunrise. If there is noone in the room, the lights go off after a few minutes. All of the lights go off after 9pm, because we’re in bed by then. When we come home after dark, the lights in the entryways come on, so we don’t come home to a dark house.

        This also serves as part of the security system: after 9, or when we’re out, if the motion sensors detect motion, all of the lights come on in the house (in addition to sirens, etc.)

        I think every smart bulb is dimmable, and many change color - either warm/cool or full spectrum. We use this on the holidays, with some of the lights changing to green during halloween, and a combination of red, green, and gold during christmas. The dimming is also intentionally used: the lights are brighter during crepuscular times, and dim as it gets darker.

        Finally: I have a little novelty desk lamp my wife bought me: a sisal moon wound through with fairy lights, with a dangling globe filled with more fairy lights. It’s cheap, mostly plastic, and I love it. What i don’t love is that it’s battery powered, and the switch is located on the bottom of the base, so to turn it on I had to pick it up. I put in a wired AA replacement pack that plugs into the wall, and put that outlet on a smart switch; now my fairy lamp turns on a bit before I start getting ready to go to bed, and turns off automatically when I usually put my book down. I don’t have to get out of bed to turn it off, but can have it on while I’m reading.

        There are other ways we use these smart lights, but those are the main ones. Yes, it’s all just convenience and ambience, but so are light bulbs… why not just use candles or oil lamps instead?

        • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          But are the light bulbs and blinds smart enough to detect when I’m overstimulated and want darkness, no matter the time of day?

          • “Smart” is like “AI” - all marketing, no real smarts.

            In a well-set up automated house, you could tell it with a couple of words that you’re overstimulated, and it would shut everything down for you. No walking around closing everything up. So, yeah, that might be a pretty good use case.