There are incredible parallels between the failure modes of smart home technology and modern web site architecture:
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There are incredible parallels between the failure modes of smart home technology and modern web site architecture:
When the power goes out When JavaScript fails
My smart lock failed and I’m locked out of my house This form button doesn’t submit
The company went out of business and now this {smart device JavaScript framework} isn’t receiving updates and poses a security risk
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Khalid ⚡️replied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat Personally, I’d like to see a law that says every hardware device company must plan for obsolescence and failure before releasing a product. This includes open-sourcing services in the case of failure.
Also, they must account for the recycling or decommissioning of their products in terms of the price of their products.
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Khalid ⚡️ on last edited by
@khalidabuhakmeh whew, yeah, there’s another one for sure: the amount of physical, software, labor, and efficiency wasted!
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Eric A. Meyerreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat Thank you for connecting the dots between my predilection for no-JS web dev and my staunch refusal to adopt home automation.
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James Nashreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat What I always wanted was a "LAN of Things". What they gave us was an "Internet of Things".
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Eric A. Meyer on last edited by
@Meyerweb how are you feeling about NFTs though eric
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to James Nash on last edited by
@cirrus yeahhhhh
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Scott Jehlreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat Yes. I recall using a similar metaphor around 2013 about the electricity in a home being the JS and that the "shelter" part of the home should work well regardless of whether the power is on and people actually got pretty upset, but that was back when folks were writing posts saying progressive enhancement is dead.
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Scott Jehl on last edited by
@scottjehl new smart force-field roof requires power to repel rain, advocates say “don’t worry if power goes out, the power has never gone out for me”
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Tim Severienreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat Most smart home tech is light bulbs so you can dim them from your sofa and go “RED LIGHT DISTRICT INIT” and impress guests for exactly once because you can tell they’re not impressed.
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Alex Russellreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat Responsibility is always an option:
Keeping a smart home guest-friendly — Sensors and sensibility
Chatting last night with an out-of-town friend staying at another smart home I know in the city, he was recounting arriving off a long-haul flight and being unable to simply turn off the lights in the guest room. "I just want to go to sleep, shout at the system to turn the lights off, will you!
Sensors and sensibility (sensorsandsensibility.com)
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Tim Severien on last edited by
@timsev I mean, the keyword is all wrong. If you said RED ALERT I’d be really enjoying it
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Josh Waynereplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat The parallels go even deeper because the solutions in home automation also look like the same we use for websites.
Power goes out automated devices still have physical switches as falllbacks.
Smart lock fails physical key backup + only ran it locally so it was less prone to failure in the first place (planned fallbacks)
Company went out of business doesn't matter because I used an open source, local solution and never connected to their cloud anyway (reduced dependencies)
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Josh Wayne on last edited by
@joshwayne yeah! These things can be designed responsibly—but most often are not
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Jason Petersen (he)replied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat you mean internet outage, not power, right?
I have a couple of UPSes in my house but I’m not sure what exactly my home automation is expected to do when the power’s out. Lights? HVAC? My coffee maker? They all don’t work without power.
And yeah, don’t use devices that talk over the internet.
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Jason Petersen (he) on last edited by
@jason no I did not originally mean that but both failure modes are important!
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Chris Henrickreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat ditto with e-bikes, I’ve heard of manufacturers going under and then customers no longer can get their bike fixed or its software updated.
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Chris Henrick on last edited by
@clhenrick woof, that’s an expensive brick
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Ericreplied to Zach Leatherman :11ty: on last edited by
@zachleat oh hey, a definitely unrelated link https://mashable.com/article/internet-of-things-university-network-
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Zach Leatherman :11ty:replied to Eric on last edited by
that seems HIGHLY RELATED, ERIC