Ah. Too bad. Sorry, it's been a little while since I shopped for mine.
starkzarn
I use an Amcrest AD-410 for this and it works great. Video is ingested by frigate, and I am using a fork of amcrest2mqtt to monitor for button pushes and receive a notification on my phone. They also have a "chime kit" I think it's called, to hook up to your 24v doorbell unit.
My brother in Christ, scope your sessions... Firefox has containers, chrome has profiles, or hell, just use two different browsers.
I'm not sure you understand what "objectively" actually means... Care to provide your data in support of your objective conclusion?
Ah it's fine, we know they'll be totally fine on their own. I mean, they have their own totally reliable, independent electric grid, right?
It's just an NTP pool. The device is trying to update it's time. Likely it made many other requests to other servers when this one didn't work.
Maintaining up to date lists of anything is a game of whack a mole, so you're always going to get weird results.
If you're actually unsure, pcap the traffic on your pfsense box and see for yourself. NTP is an unencrypted protocol, so tshark or Wireshark will have no problem telling you all about it.
That said, I'd still agree with the other poster about local integration with home assistant and just block that sucker from the Internet.
Ran into a similar conundrum. We use mealie for recipe management and occasionally meal planning, but the shopping list is clunky. We resorted to just making a list on a card in Planks. Not purpose-built, but it has worked rather well for us.
I don't know how you got a picture of me, but I demand it is removed!
Potentially, but precision is important, especially if you're going to make sweeping claims about a topic, acting as an authority.
This is absolutely not what DNSSEC is. DNSSEC provides authenticity of the response, not privacy. You're describing a means of encrypted name resolution, like dns-over-tls, dns-over-https, etc.
I haven't done a code review so I can't answer that question with facts. I do think however, that anything that bootstraps a FLOSS framework like openwrt could easily be a risk to privacy.
You use privacy and security interchangeably here. They are not the same.
Discord isn't free, you're paying with your data. 😅