this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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homeassistant

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Home Assistant is open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first. Powered by a worldwide community of tinkerers and DIY enthusiasts. Perfect to run on a Raspberry Pi or a local server. Available for free at home-assistant.io

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by ilikedatsyuk to c/homeassistant
 

I figured we could all share some of the cooler things we've done to get the conversation moving in here.

Here are some of the automations I'm proud of and get the most use out of.

Blinds and Lighting

  • Open and close the blinds (Ikea Fyrtur) according to the light levels outside
  • If a window is open, the blind will only close to 50%, but it will close automatically after the window is closed
  • Turn all lights off when the blinds are opened, and turn lights on in occupied rooms when the blinds are closed
  • Automatically close the blinds in the bedroom and bathroom when the shower is on. Open them after we leave the master suite.

Websites

  • (Selenium) Auto login to Amazon to check on the status of my Kindle daily reading streak and notify me if I forget to read. We must keep the streak intact!
  • Auto categorize new transactions in YouNeedABudget and mark them as approved, as well as pull my net worth into Home Assistant
  • Get my most-listened to tracks and artists from Last.FM and pull those into Home Assistant
  • Notify me if there are documents in my Paperless-NGx server that need to be categorized and filed

Reminders

  • When I walk in the door, announce any outstanding Todoist tasks marked with the @alert label so I know to do it before I sit down. Examples are to change the furnace filter or Venmo my friend for Youtube TV
  • I run OCR on the camera feed from my garage camera to determine whether the bins are in the garage. The bins say Trash and Recycling on top, so I look for those words in the image. If they are in the garage in the evening before trash day, I receive an alert

Media and Torrenting

  • Notify me and display a badge in Home Assistant when there is a pending request in Overseerr
  • (Selenium) Log into my favorite private torrent tracker website from Node-RED to check whether I need to take any actions

HVAC

  • Preheat or pre-cool the house prior to peak electricity pricing going into effect. During peak hours, auto adjust the thermostat to prevent it from running
  • Turn the thermostat off if there are windows open. Automatically restore previous setting (cool or heat) when all windows are closed.
  • Turn the bathroom fan on after the shower is turned off and no one is around. Turn it off after 80 minutes or the humidity in the bathroom is within 10% of the humidity in the bedroom, whichever comes first.

Misc

  • Node-RED monitors the status of my UPSes for my servers. If the battery drops below 50% while the power is out, it initiates graceful shutdowns of my Synology and other servers
  • Auto sort the Home Assistant grocery list upon adding a new item
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[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 years ago (4 children)

I've got a few fun ones:

At night, my cat sometimes gets the zoomies, so I have a projector pointed at a wall with a motion sensor. When he goes on his tear through the house while we're sleeping, the projector turns on and plays a video of strings moving on the wall. This tires him out without him screaming at us to play with him. It turns off again after a few minutes with no motion.

The lights and Roku screens in my office are on a motion sensor, but are also linked with a seat sensor so they don't turn off when I'm at my desk. Sitting at the desk also sends a Wake on LAN packet to my computer. Sitting at my electronics workbench changes the lights to bright white with another seat sensor.

Lights (HA), desktop wallpaper (with Wallpaper Engine), and in-computer RGB (using OpenRGB) change from blue/pink during the day to dark red/orange at sunset so being in my office late doesn't mess with my sleep.

A macro button next to my keyboard disables my screens and turns on a fan pointed at my VR area for workouts.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

Oh, and the button next to my bed that turns off all the lights in the house also turns off my PC.

[–] ilikedatsyuk 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Those are very original!

How do you detect the zoomies?!?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago

I just have a motion sensor in a hallway his zoom pattern follows. It's not between the bedroom and the bathroom, so it would only trigger with the cat or a burglar (the automation is inactive during the day).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

Love the cat one! That's a unique take on home automation that I have never encountered before.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I have a couple of automations running, but my favourite is one of the simpler ones:

When I set an alarm on my phone all lights turn off except for a single night light (LEDs under my bed), and when I then put my phone down on the wireless charger near my bed (I only use that one wireless charger, so the automation just checks for any wireless charger), the light turns off completely and my phone screen turns off.

If I remove the phone from the charger before my alarm's gone off, the night light turns back on, putting it back on the charger turns the night light back off, etc.

The automation does multiple useful things at once:

  • I haven't used a light switch at home in forever
  • I haven't forgotten to set an alarm in forever
  • I get very obvious feedback that my phone starts charging
  • I have a night light that's easily turned on/off, without the need for motion sensors in the bedroom that could have false positives
  • I have a clear trigger for when I'm in bed, that I'm using for example for my white noise machine that turns on for 45 minutes when I go to bed
[–] teflocarbon 2 points 2 years ago

This gave me the idea for how I can use a smart outlet to see if I’m using the wireless charger by my bedside table and not just any generic charger. Thanks!

Some great ideas there.

[–] dmtalon 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

I'm tracking my HVAC filter and rest it's 90days with an NFC tag

Loosely followed an online how-to to create a tracking chore list using NFC tags for my son's allowance. Automations to nag him on trash night to gather/take out the trash.

A simple Automation that turns on a fan in the basement when the outside temp is above out AC setting to help distribute cool basement air.

Outside security lights on/off at dusk/dawn

House auto arms/disarms (Alarmo) when everyone leaves or someone arrives (via life 360 integration)

On trash day, after noon if my son scans (NFC) one of the trash cans, the garage door opens to let him in/put them away.

My son gets a notification when he comes home from school if we got mail (aka the mailbox was opened that day)

Those are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm using HA to track device usage of my kids, and I can give them bonus time if they do something nice or a chore. And, negative time when they misbehave. Perhaps an idea for you?

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[–] henry_rowengartner 8 points 2 years ago (1 children)

My Air Quality monitoring. I monitoring CO2, VOCs, PM and such. I then have automations run the air exchanger. They say air inside is 5X more polluted then outside I have the opposite.

[–] ilikedatsyuk 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

That's pretty cool! I haven't dove into the world of air purifiers yet.

[–] henry_rowengartner 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Honestly it was easier than I expected. I have a fairly new home and it has an HRV. I replaced it's paper filters with MERV 8. I also picked up an Air Gradient, slick little project.

I change my filters about everything 3 months, they get pretty gnarly. I filter the air on the way out with a basic screen because it passes over the blower and...by design it would get absolutely filthy in short order.

I made a bunch of "sensors" in HA to calculate the indoor AQI, and average.

Cheers.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

What indoor air quality sensor do you have?

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[–] OutrageousUmpire 7 points 2 years ago (4 children)
  • All my lights turn on and off based on motion sensors
  • Through the unofficial community Mila integration, I control my air purifiers based on different circumstances, like whether the house is empty.
  • Collect indoor air quality info from my Airthings to view in Grafana
[–] imaBEES 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Can you speak more to your air purifier automations? do you have them stop running when the house is empty? or run when it's empty?

[–] OutrageousUmpire 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (2 children)

I have them run full blast when we aren’t home. They get quite loud on higher settings so when we are home we usually keep them at a lower setting.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 years ago

Keeps the cats nervous

[–] imaBEES 3 points 2 years ago

Ah cool, that makes sense!

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[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 years ago (4 children)

I don't have a lot of automations yet, but a really useful one has been using smart plugs to detect when the laundry machines are running so that Home Assistant can send alerts when they finish.

[–] ilikedatsyuk 4 points 2 years ago

That’s a great one! We have an automation like that too, though we sometimes wish we could remain blissfully ignorant that the laundry is done.

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[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 years ago

The ones I use the most are:

  • Turning on lights and setting specific scenes when I turn on TVs in my bedroom, living room and theater room.
  • Brighten lights whenever Plex is paused or finishes playing, which is great in a dedicated home theater where the lighting is very dark when watching a movie. This has actually helped improve many hang out nights with friends because the moment after a movie finishes is less awkward, leading more naturally into a nice conversation before every heads home.
  • Reminder notifications for when washing machine or dryer cycles finish, or when my garage door has been open for more than 15 minutes (unless I override that with a toggle on my dashboard).
  • Turning off all of my lights and switches when I leave the house, unless a boolean variable is flipped (e.g. if someone else is at my house w/o me, which is unusual since I live alone). Well, not quite everything, there are a few devices like a couple power monitoring smart pugs that always remain on.
[–] dynamicperson 6 points 2 years ago (3 children)

For me one of my favourites are my extractor fan control in my bathrooms. I have a switch on the fan and a humidity sensor close by. Turn on the shower and the extractor will turn on until the humidity is lowered enough, then switch off. In addition I have a static programmable button to press should you need it for other reasons. I just love the world of entities and how they link together to make something functional.

[–] linearchaos 3 points 2 years ago

For trash nights I just make sure the garage door is open and shut during appropriate hours and assume that I took the trash out. That's never failed for me but if it was a problem I would probably just have the cameras alarm when I hit a certain zone and make sure that zone is triggered during a certain hour. Another option would be to put a Z-Wave switch in the garage by the trash cans I would tap whenever I took the trash out.

Auto relock the front door after 15 minutes, with a code lock so I can't lock my keys inside.

Notification by telegram anytime any entry exit door is opened or closed.

Extra alarm if the doors left open for more than 30 minutes.

Alarm when the dogs GPS collar gets to less than 20%, notification when the collar gets above 80%.

Blue Iris sends a picture to telegram whenever there's motion on my cameras during certain times of the day or night.

Front doorbell AI notif on person even if they don't ring the bell.

Automated sprinklers based on the weather using beehive and HA automation.

[–] linearchaos 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yeah the humidistat in the bathroom is absolutely golden. The one I installed will automatically come on/off at a humidity set point or if I turn it on it will stay on for 15 minutes.

[–] dynamicperson 2 points 2 years ago

What I do Is I have a threshold. of switching on above say 75% and switching off below 70%. So it doesn't have a set time. It's just making sure things come down to at least 70% before it switches off. It does get more complex in winter as humidity tends to be higher by default, but I am playing around with the thresholds to figure out the optimal percentages. a fan on it's own cant get the humidity down to below the general humidity in the area. Nonetheless. Fun to play with and works like a bomb.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

How did you manage to get selenium working with Amazon!? I can't get it to work well. Amazon always thinks I'm a bot and blocks access. Which is right but still.

[–] ilikedatsyuk 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I found the same if I try to log in too often. I found that it doesn't hit me with a captcha when I set the cadence to hourly.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago

Thanks I'll be sure to give that a try.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I've been using Home Assistant for a while but I don't have a ton of IoT devices so I don't have a ton of automations set up.

My most useful though is an alert that triggers when my garage door has been open for ten minutes, and then again every ten minutes after until it has been open for an hour when it will automatically close.

Accidentally left the garage door open all night at least twice before this and thankfully nothing happened but the automation has prevented this at least twice as well.

Also gives me peace of mind in case I accidentally open it when I'm away.

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

that's really impressive! i automate my sunsetter shades based on whether it's sunny or not and sunrise/sunset times. not so much for heat control but rather to protect my sofa and eames chair from uv.

next item is to find a button i can use to train the dog to turn on her vornado fan when she's hot 🤣

[–] ilikedatsyuk 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I've thought about adding in some blind control to cut down on the amount of heat that comes in on hot, sunny days, but I think I enjoy the sunlight too much! My neighbors never open theirs and I often think about how it must be a cave in there.

I suspect the button would be the easy part of your automation there lol. I'd be impressed if you could train the dog to control the fan!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

Leave me alone! I love my cave (and privacy).

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I'm impressed, my best I feel is to turn on the outside fans when a person is detected and the temp is over 86 (I don't know why I picked 86, seemed appropriate at the time)

[–] ilikedatsyuk 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I have some arbitrary temps in my system too. I also have our bed warmer automated to turn on each night, but only if it's <=60 F outside.

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago (3 children)

A few automations are running in my house:

  • Turned the nightstand light into a wake-up light, which distinguishes between weekdays and weekends,
  • Kitchen light turns on and off based on sunset and midnight with random offset respectively,
  • Garbage collection notifications,
  • Introduced an extra (wireless) light switch in the hallway, which controls a Shelly connected to the light. The original light switch is still intact, however it is positioned at an unconvenient location.

In the coming period I want to:

  • Automate the shutters and combine that with a light sensor.
  • Introduce a routine that starts the washing machine and/or drying during the day based on the amount of incoming solar power. Not sure yet how to do this, since the washing machine has a physical start button via touch.
[–] ilikedatsyuk 2 points 2 years ago (4 children)

How does your wake-up light behavior change on weekdays versus weekends?

For your washing machine and dryer, could Switchbot be a good fit?

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[–] Jeearr 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I love my door sensor announcements. Garage opens? Google Home goes "GARAGE OPEN". Front door blows open at 11pm because it wasn't closed properly? "FRONT DOOR OPEN... all home lights come on"

Just security stuff. So much customization that other products don't offer.

My tankless hot water heater is controlled via Home Assistant too. Shuts off the circulation loop at 11pm~630am. Saves a ton of gas!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Which addon did you use for the paperless-ngx integration?

[–] ilikedatsyuk 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

No special addon. I use a Node-RED flow to query the Paperless-NGx API to find the number of documents with the "intake" tag. Here's a template.

Instructions:

  1. Create an API token for Paperless-NGx by going to http://<PAPERLESS_URL_WITH_PORT>/admin/authtoken/tokenproxy/ and clicking Add Token
  2. Import the flow into Node-RED
  3. Take the token you've created in step 1 and paste it over the <PAPERLESS_TOKEN> placeholder in the "Headers" function node
  4. Change the URL in the "Make API Request" HTTP node to point towards your Paperless-NGx installation
  5. Replace the debug node at the end with whatever you want. I personally use a Sensor node to import the value into Home Assistant.
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I built myself an alarm that fades in the lights to help me wake up. The best part of it though, is from a blueprint script I put together, I'll have a selection of random music playing for an amount of time. Both of these things help me to attempt to focus and wake up, because I am otherwise awful at waking up in a decent amount of time.

It works most of the time. Lmao

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

I have my house switch to night mode after a certain amount of time after sunset. During night mode:

  • turning my computer on or off will toggle my desk light.
  • if my cellphone is put over my wireless charger it will turn off my bed light (or turn it back on if I remove it).
[–] MuttMutt 3 points 2 years ago

One of my favorites is setup with a large (1242 LED's) WLED strip on my front porch. I have a motion sensor that is setup to trigger a switch to a bright white when the strip is on or if we get home and the presence detection picks us up and sets the strip to stay that way for a certain amount of time. The strip has a few different random settings that it can use when turning on as well so one night it may be a rainbow and another night it may be a solid color that walk around the strip changing one LED at a time. Comes on automatically at sunset and turns off at 11pm but until 6 am the strip can still come on with motion or presence detection.

The other one controls my electric water heater. I have 3 temp sensors, one near the top heating element location, one near the bottom element heating location, and a third on the water output line. The original temp controllers are still in place and set the maximum temp so the tank can never go over acceptable levels even if the ESP8266 fails in an on mode. Then I let the temp ramp down at a certain time of the evening and ramp back up in the morning for use throughout the day. But lets say you come home late and need a shower, when the output temp goes over a certain point after the system has started to ramp down it will kick the heater back into it's regular mode until the temp drops below a certain threshold. It also uses the HA app to track where we are located and I have two zones that keep the water heater going, those are home which just barely covers the property and near home which is within about 30 miles of home. Once everyone who is tracked goes outside of those zones the temp ramps back down to the overnight setting and ramps back up when we get into the near home zone.

I have a ton of other things I want to implement like lights that turn on red automatically after a certain time of day so you can walk around at night and not kill your night vision. Right now I am working on the house as the electrical, plumbing, and a ton of other stuff needed work. But when I am done my cheap old $18K house will be a fully integrated smart home.

[–] StefanT 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Washing machine and dryer are monitored for power consumption. When the power consumption drops to a minimum for some minutes then my wife gets a push notification to her mobile that the machine has finished. Was a bit trial & error especially for the washing machine which has phases while washing where it does "nothing" for some minutes and at the end it turns the laundry every now and then after the program is done (to avoid crease).

[–] ilikedatsyuk 3 points 2 years ago

Same here. It took some trial and error, but it's awesome to have the current laundry status in Home Assistant.

Even I, a lover of all smart home gadgets, don't want my laundry machines to have any smarts built in. I just want reliability; I can add the smarts myself.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I'm still relatively new to HA and feel very much like an amateur. My favorite one is turning on the outside perimeter lights (after sunset) and unlocks front and back door when my in-laws arrive.

[–] Sudo 7 points 2 years ago

Dont you mean lock?

[–] ilikedatsyuk 2 points 2 years ago

Those are good ways to start! My system has grown over time... I didn't set out to do all of these things at once, but instead have built them up over a period of years.

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