![]() ![]() Of course, that does mean the user interface is a lot!Īs long as you're happy to fiddle around making everything just right, then the UI isn't too bad. ![]() But HA was able to interact with nearly everything. Integration was pretty easy - assuming you trust the system with your username and passwords. It quickly detected all my smarthome gadgets (I have far too many). ![]() Even something like viewing sensor history slows to a crawl. Not in the interface itself, which is delightfully snappy, but it is slow on any form of add-on installation, upgrade, or reboot. And, when I came back, it worked!īut, that slowness becomes a recurrent theme. I left it for a few hours and did something more interesting. I could see that the Pi was responding to pings, but the web interface wasn't coming up. Sweet!įrom there it was just a case of following the installation steps. Raspberry Pi 4 (Raspberry Pi 3 is ok too, if you have one laying around).īut, if you go to the latest releases page and then click "show all assets", you'll be rewarded with a file called haos_rpi2-9.5.img.xz - that's Home Assistant OS for the Raspberry Pi 2. The official Home Assistant installation guide for the Pi says that you can use a: But it works and - crucially - is still supported by Home Assistant OS. ![]() It's old, outdated, slow, with limited RAM, and has a bunch of much-abused GPIO pins. So I dug through my scrapheap of old tech and resurrected an ancient Pi2. As much as I'd love a 4B, they seem permanently sold out. They say that The Best Camera Is The One That's With You - the same is true of Raspberries Pi. ![]()
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