

Considering the market share of Xiaomi and Huawei it’s probably only for cars sold in China.
Considering the market share of Xiaomi and Huawei it’s probably only for cars sold in China.
Not really. Here it’s simply cherrypicking.
There is no ban of cars with combustion engines, just on those using petrol based fuels.
Fortunately:
No support for Core or Supervised—can I still use them?
You can still use them even if we no longer support them. There are many users running Home Assistant in all kinds of unofficial ways. This change just means we are removing it from our end-user documentation and will no longer recommend using these installation methods from an official standpoint.
Will the developer documentation on these things remain?
Yes, those will remain. The developer documentation for running Home Assistant’s Core Python application directly in a Python virtual environment will remain. This is how we develop. This proposal is about removing end-user documentation and support.
Doesn’t “hot water” refer to what you can get out of the faucet, so like 60 °C (140 °F), not boiling water?
How many courics?
I guess a bread knife works pretty well for slicing roast, i.e. the dish, not raw meat. Additionally, one may also use it for chopping e.g. kale or pumpkin.
From someone living near Frankish, Hessian, and Swabian germany, this is still accurate (for now).
As far as I know, the traditional German dialects almost have disappeared after WW2. What’s remaining is people speaking regionally “coloured” variants of Standard German. E.g. Bodo Bach doesn’t speak traditional Hessian, but New-Hessian.
I don’t speak either. So that’s something both have in common.
Don’t forget the generator/engine.
I didn’t claim it was cost or ressource efficient in any way.
Essentially, it’s ok if you get sick at home, but if you have an accident at some remote place, you’re screwed if you don’t get helicopter transport.
There is a hospital in Andorra, but the map says “no data”, as it probably wasn’t evaluated how long it takes to get there from more remote places.
I also think their numbers are too optimistic. You probably could store about 2 GWh energy if you equip all of the supposedly 100,000 mine shafts in Australia with their storages. Yet, this would not only mean 100,000 facilities to be constructed, but also mean 100,000 facilities to be checked and maintained regularly.
If I understand them correctly, they intend to use heavy materials from scrap for the weights, e.g. some steel container filled with concrete rubble. Thus, the price of them will be relatively low.
They are. Buckrams, bear’s or wild garlic (allium ursinum) is in fact not “wild” garlic (allium sativum).
Algorithm derives from the name of the Islamic mathematician Al Khwariizmi, who has written Al-Jabr , a very wide spread and influencial book about indian numerals (today we call them arabic numerals) and arithmetics calculus. The word algebra derives from that booktitle.
Thanks for your explanation.
I assume they mean they won’t pay for a Hue Zigbee bridge, a relatively closed eco system, (and some cloud subscription or whatever they mean with Hue Premium) and new (expensive) Hue bulbs, but they already have Hue bulbs in use in an ad-hoc mode with a Zigbee controller.
I also consider switching to Zigbe2MQTT one day.
It’s global warming in the sense that the global average temperature increases.