In the past, I've had a tendency to "make do" when buying new kit; an example of which led to me running the ethernet devices on my network through a poor little over-subscribed 5-port Ubiquiti router I used to carry around in my backpack for work purposes.
So I finally got my shit together this weekend and implemented a nice and simple layer-2, 16-port switch that has enough ports for everything in the flat that requires an ethernet connection.
That is fed DHCP by my Nest Wifi Pro, which gets internet from my cable router, which has been set to dumb modem mode, and now everything works as it should with no complicated routing required.
Edit: Oh yeah, I also bought new ethernet cables of varying colours, so I no longer have to guess what's plugged in to which switch port.
Sometimes the simplest things make the biggest difference.
Additionally, I bought several dual-gang smart sockets to replace the normal ones (one of which needed a bit of drywall cutting to accommodate), along with two 6-socket smart surge protectors and one 4-socket one.
So my flat's smart home integration is even better and more granular now, with presence sensing turning various sockets off and on when I leave or come home, hopefully saving me some money on the energy bill.
But besides that, it's just fucking cool; it really does feel like you're living in the future when it all works properly.
I run it all through Google Home, which is a bit irritating, as I would rather not be so reliant on Google.
I do also run a
Home Assistant Green as a backup, but it's just a pain in the ass to configure compared to Google Home.
Despite having a pretty good user interface, there's enough of it that feels too linuxy, meaning various things feel half-assed and unintuitive because they've been developed by some neckbeard in his basement. Even their own Zigbee dongle that they sell as an add-on to the Green is a pain in the ass to troubleshoot.
I could probably get Home Assistant working just as well as Google Home, but it would probably take me a week of learning and fucking about, and I just don't have the patience for it these days.
I have also bought a Pi 5 (I just love these little boxes), but haven't come up with a use for it yet. Any ideas?
On the guitar front, while I've got a nice Blackstar HT20-R combo amp and pedal board set-up, I find that when I practice these days, it's mostly through my
Spark Mini, which is a wonderful little desktop amp. Pokey enough to give good tone, with excellent and extensive amp (and pedal) modelling built in.
And I must admit, while I love my Les Paul, the Strat is the one that gets the most play-time these days.
I still play the LP when I want a chonkier tone, and it's still
very nice to play, with a wider array of tones available (I love the almost fuzz-like sound you get from dialling back the tone knob for the bridge pickup). But my Strat just feels like it was made for me.
And unlike the LP, it doesn't go out of tune if I so much as look at it funny.
The unreliable G-string is a very real thing
