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Everything posted by simplextech
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Zwave outlets with power monitoring - which ones work with ISY?
simplextech replied to johnnyt's topic in ISY994
I wasn't happy with the 'name' of the URL so I renamed. Sorry for updating but I did it. https://github.com/UniversalDevicesInc/Z-Wave-Devices/issues Original post was updated with the new link but there it is again just in case. -
Zwave outlets with power monitoring - which ones work with ISY?
simplextech replied to johnnyt's topic in ISY994
A list of z-wave devices I try to update as I get new devices to try out: https://github.com/UniversalDevicesInc/Z-Wave-Devices/issues -
Zwave outlets with power monitoring - which ones work with ISY?
simplextech replied to johnnyt's topic in ISY994
The dome and zen15 I know report energy readings. I would have to do a test on the zen06 (I think I have one somewhere). I like the zen15 plugs because they can handle 15a which makes them very versatile. -
Lot of work because of an app. There are several apps for the ISY so without you saying which one it's hard to help with anything. Given the open nature of the ISY and several apps existing now and likely more in the future it's more of a choose your own adventure thing. The Insteon Hub only has one app... and too bad if you don't like it and good luck with support. As for migrating devices to the Insteon hub... never done it. So I don't know I've migrated to/from other systems and it's generally pretty easy and sometimes doesn't even require physical touch of the devices if the new controller supports link management and you can wipe the links and install new one's. Otherwise you will have to physically reset each device which is a PITA. As for the ISY. If it fails and you have a backup then it's very easy to just swap in a new ISY. It's not so easy with the Insteon Hub as it's mostly cloud based and I've read where other's had to send the unit to them and wait for a replacement but I dunno.
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wireless tags is available in the store. Polisy is made to be an appliance without direct end-user logins. However If you have one of the earlier geek batch versions (developers received) then you would also have login capabilities to do whatever. User installed/modified anything is not supported. Just have to put out that disclaimer. Otherwise if you sign up for the developer program through UDI I think then you get login access? I'm not sure @Michel Kohanim would provide much better direction in that regard.
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From the Polisy web interface there is a "NodeServers" option in the top menu. Open that and select "NodeServer Store". You'll be presented with a list of NodeServers you can install.
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Insteon Open/Close Sensor (#2421, TriggerLinc) GOING TO SLEEP?
simplextech replied to dbwarner5's topic in ISY994
Yeah I was not happy at all with the Insteon Open/Close sensors. -
For a regular T-Stat there's several options in Z-Wave and a newish company MCOHome has some newer V2 devices recently released. If I had regular HVAC my preference would be a Venstar because they have a direct and local API for integration. Yes they are wifi BUT they do NOT depend on a vendor's cloud for functioning. For line-voltage aka baseboards I have StelPro Z-Wave and NuHeat Signature both work well.
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Z-Wave device FW update OTA via ISY?
simplextech replied to telljcl's topic in Z-Wave - Series 300/500
YMMV however you can add the PC Controller as a secondary to the ISY. Then from PC Controller you will be able to see/control the devices and you can apply the firmware. Now the thing about firmware and z-wave devices..... unless it fixes a problem you're having it's generally better/safer to pass on the firmware update. If it's not broken don't fix it -
Any (including polyglot) non zwave door locks out there?
simplextech replied to tim2u's topic in ISY994
@tim2u you can look at various Wifi compatible locks. There's a couple out there with potential. I'm currently waiting for Alfred to release their API (in the works) to develop a IP based nodeserver for that lock. In the meantime there's Lockitron oops nevermind. Just searched adn they are now shutdown. Pity had promise. -
I agree it would be reasonable. The issue is the enormous variety of fly by night Wifi devices that have flooded the market. Which vendor to choose, how long will they be around. Another issue that comes up from Wifi devices is most consumer Wifi being a router and built in access point have a pretty small device limit before the AP starts dropping connections. The support noise that arises from users complaining just adds to the support cost of having to answer all of those complaints. Wifi is a great option for small installations or for specific use cases but it's difficult in larger scenarios.
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In most I agree so we're starting on a good footing right? Wifi is just another medium of communicating with IP devices, but it's been used synonymous as a device interface so I'll continue using it. Yes UDI could, maybe should support one or more not all wifi device vendors. I do not agree with your pick of Wyze because they have been outright hostile about access to their API for development and interfacing and they are purely cloud based which I do not promote if given options. For the same reason I would not consider Tuya based devices even though they are dirt cheap and plentiful they are very closed with their API marketed and branded six ways from Sunday making it error difficult to determine what device and API you are really actually working with and because of this who know's for sure who's server you're really sending data to??? The Tasmota project is awesome and the Sonof devices are really cool and I like there's a NodeServer for them but... not everyone can hack a device and replace the firmware so that's not a broad enough option to most. Now on the flip side if TP-Link would open up through a partnership for an official API integration which could use their local API with option to use the cloud API I think that would be great. The existing NodeServer works very well but it is reverse engineered. The same goes for Etekcity aka Vesync devices which are cheap and work well but again it's a reverse engineered integration. Now I've thought about this a little since your previous post. It's been a while since I've done that so I thought about it and thought... what about "Shelly" devices? They have a lot of EU devices and are expanding their US device line up. They also have a very open API and support direct local integration via multiple integration friendly protocols including HTTP and MQTT. Almost the perfect device for integrating and they are wifi. Hmm..???? So I ordered a couple of the new US Shelly Plugs to play with. Would a Shelly integration scratch the Wifi itch even though such a "official" supported Wifi would be vendor limited? Is there another vendor with quality products and open integration which would be more preferred? Or is the preference still a wild west approach of NodeServers being developed at random based on individuals at the time interest and then some supported and others abandoned as there's no accountability as they are free. This is the primary reason open source projects such as Home Assistant and OpenHAB have hundreds or thousands of integrations some of them are excellent and some of them are FUBAR. This discussion comes up on many forums about drivers, plugins, components whatever that platform calls them and people always point to the number of components available for Home Assistant as evidence of why it's great. Reality. Developers write code for two reasons. Personal interest or Money. Personal interest and use changes over time but paid products tend to survive the long as long as a product sells or has a subscription base then money is gained and development continues. Will an official UDI Integration come from this? I dunno only @Michel Kohanim can weigh in on that. Will a Simplex Technology supported NodeServer come into play here? I haven't decided yet. An official integration takes time to develop and even more time to properly support such a thing. Time is money after all. So there are factors at play to weigh on this. Sorry to everyone for the rant. Just my 2cents worth.
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Ok. Which vendor? There's one major problem with wifi devices that neither UDI or any other home automation platform can change. All of the wifi device vendors all are trying to create their own proprietary ecosystem and have closed API's. The closest thing to an open API comes from TP-Link with their Kasa devices. Which has a nodeserver already. So how do you propose Wifi be supported when there's no standard API to develop against?
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I noticed in the Z-Wave tab there's a new option menu to enable/disable Network Wide Inclusion/Excusion. Make sure you change that to Yes to use NWI.
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Different stick. The $19 stick is the Official reference stick from Silicon Labs and it is a Z-Wave 700 series USB stick. It is cheap (costing) but it is the reference standard by which others must validate against. Oh and yeah I have 2 of those and they work great.
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Oh please NOOOOOO.... that stick aka Nortek stick is horrible and oh BTW you can't backup the z-wave portion so.. umm... SOL if the stick fails... it's also NOT a 700 series stick so you'd want to be upgrading in a year or so and without being able to backup and restore... ooops too bad! Would Zigbee end devices be nice with ISY... sure! But... that's a whole different ball game and a new can of worms and up until just recently with Zigbee 3.0 there really wasn't a REAL standard to cling to and call something supported so it was always a hit or miss and MUCH leaning on community developed drivers for most devices.
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No it wont cause a "problem". @blueman2 pointed out that the "update neighbors" is still available which will work for some/most mixed environments. I'm currently treading in somewhat of an unknown here as well as I no longer have a mixed environment to test with. However my concern which could be unfounded is that the explorer frames are not being responded to by the non plus devices. This may not cause any problems at all if doing the update neighbors sends that information back to the controller to update the routing table with. So what I'm getting at is... No you shouldn't be alarmed about this. But aware that the "heal" being removed is not some "new to ISY thing" I've seen it with other systems as well. How this will affect things in real world scenarios I can't tell you as I don't have a mixed environment. So far I've not heard from any systems that don't have a "heal" the screams of bloody murder and calling for heads to roll from any users... about this issue.. I think many more pains are involved from those trying to implement S2 security (across the board with all systems) at the moment and I'm curious when that will emerge from the depths to the ISY and how "SmartStart" will even be handled....
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Like @lilyoyo1 said... send it back... return it.
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Technically by the Z-Wave Plus specification a "Heal" is.... "Not necessary".... Now the details of that is because Z-Wave Plus introduced "Explorer Frames" which when a route to a device no longer works the controller will send out lots of explorer frames that essentially ping the neighbors and ask who their neighbors are and the controller will "self-heal" and rebuild the routing table. This normally actually works ok and the mesh will re-route within seconds. The spec and docs say something like "up to X seconds" if I remember is something like 5-6 seconds for max time to send/respond to explorer frames. In general this does seem to work well in a ALL Z-Wave Plus mesh.... Now the kicker hits if you are running in a mixed Z-Wave environment..... some Plus devices and some NON Plus devices... Non Plus don't understand explorer frames so they don't respond and this can leave a hole in the mesh or inability to communicate with devices that can only route through that one non plus device. Now this is an extreme example of a broken mesh of a single device being the single route to another device... BUT... it can happen and the more non plus devices in your network the higher the chances of this happening..... In a mixed environment like lots of z-wave networks TODAY I think (my opinion) that network heal/optimize should be left in the controller as an option and in my preference I like it when controllers allow doing a per-node optimize so instead of "healing" the whole network one device at a time I can choose the node I want to optimize and force a neighbor update on. Like when I add another node and I just want to ensure the neighbors get the message they have a new neighbor.... knock knock here's some cookies
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I'll second this sentiment. Systems should be able to "function" through manual control as well as automations (programs). The programs add spice and "smarts" to the overall system but "things" happen and it defeats the idea of a smart home when a dumb switch doesn't work because the "system is down".
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Setup the older Occupancy nodeserver in the portal. Go to Connectivity IFTTT setup to generate a token URL for that purpose Use the phone to send a HTTP GET to that URL associated with that "Geofence" user Setup program to do what you want when that "user" becomes present or away This way your portal credentials are not exposed and the access is limited to a single function of marking the person home/away.
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This is simple. Pay someone to write the nodeserver or donate the GEM + CT's necessary to develop against. Easy... maybe... Sexy in the Admin Console? ?
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Aren't we all already... except the MIA company part... You send money to SmartHome who's products are made in China... so... same thing. Except if you bought it directly from the manufacturer you'd probably get support. Only good thing I have to say about the MSII is the ability to use the "On-Only" feature and linked to a switch. That's it. Wrap that in program to make logic decisions on when to turn off and call it a day. Nothing else about the MSII worked correctly for me. Glad I got rid of them!
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Zwave Failing to Add - Inovelli Switch
simplextech replied to asperber's topic in Z-Wave - Series 300/500
The drivers are there for Linux. I don't know about Mac. However you will still need a software controller to interface with it. If you're intending to do firmware updates then from the Mac you will need to run Parallels or Fusion to run a Windows VM and you can then use the free Silicon Labs PC Controller to flash the firmware. Same would apply from Linux you would need a Windows VM to run the SiLabs PC Controller software to flash firmware. -
Not without a VPN or port forwarding (BAD!!!).