You could replace "Brave Browser" with Firefox and the statement would still be true.
At least Firefox wasn't caught hijacking affiliate links.
You could replace "Brave Browser" with Firefox and the statement would still be true.
At least Firefox wasn't caught hijacking affiliate links.
OK, does that app only work if you're on the wifi?
If yes, what IP address does it tell you the camera has?
OK, I'll try.
It works best with IP cameras, but each camera is actively recording video. Zoneminder logs into the camera and downloads the footage directly, analyzes the frames for changes (like movement) and saves footage based on criteria you set.
The trickiest part is typically adding the cameras to Zoneminder.
So, for your current setup, how do you 'connect' to the cameras to view anything? Can you get a make and model of the camera?
TL;DR, it's not nearly as granular as you suggest:
https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S2352467719300748-fx1_lrg.jpg
They can generally characterize the probability that the load is for certain things, but they can't say that your power consumption is because you're using a vacuum cleaner and 7 LED bulbs. They estimate the percentage of your overall consumption that is used by certain things. It's not the same as feeding a LLM a few cat pictures and getting it to identify a cat.
If you can attach directly to the camera's video feeds, you could run something like ZoneMinder on a local machine.
There's a lot more raw data present in a couple of pictures of a cat than what a power meter has access to, however.
The meter can only see overall amperage draw, and without something to reference that against, it's hard to know what's using all the power.
Was that the dishwasher cutting on, or a chandelier with 20 incandescent bulbs? A microwave, or a hair dryer? Air compressor? Battery charger? Vacuum cleaner?
There are lots of options for things that use power, and any inferences you could draw off of power usage makes too many assumptions. For instance, power draw is increased by the amount of conductor between the thing drawing power, and the meter. So a hair dryer can draw more amps when used in an outlet farther from the meter vs if it's connected to an outlet right next to it. Plus, things draw more or less power based on the work being done. A drill spinning freely will draw less amps than a drill actively drilling into something.
There's just too many variables. The best you could hope to achieve is have a computer say "this household's power draw at this time could have been this selection of different combinations of power draws" which isn't very useful, especially considering how efficient things have gotten. How is the meter to know the difference between me turning on my outdoor lights (4x120w bulbs) and my computer running at full tilt (my high end GPU and CPU consume almost 500w at full load)?
As someone with two kids who play games on the switch, physical carts keep me from having to buy every game two or three times.
So losing the ability to buy a game and share it between three switches will severely increase the costs of games for me.
https://www.protondb.com/app/418240
Find a similar setup to yours and see what they've done to make it run.
Way to make me feel old.
I never had to do that to my N64 cartridges. That was the meme for the NES.
And even then, blowing on it didn't really help. It was the ejecting and reinserting of the cartridge that fixed the issue because the slot on the NES was janky.
It's not weed, it's that mint is very aggressive in spreading.
I personally like the mint growing in the yard it makes mowing the lawn smell great.
What are the odds they're getting one of those scam calls from the "sheriff's office" and the bail is supposed to be in iTunes gift cards?
The person could be legitimately scared, but you don't normally get to pay bail to avoid arrest, you get arrested and pay bail to avoid being held in jail until your court day.
Edit:
I see three possibilities:
-it's all fully legit. The cops somewhere are legitimately threatening this person with imprisonment unless they can pay up. Extortion like this is never a one-time event. They'll keep coming back for more and more money until they can't pay up anymore and arrest them anyway. Your best bet here is to flee the area to somewhere safer rather than pay up.
-The person is legit, but the threat of arrest is a scam.
-The whole post is a scam
Then yeah, they probably have a camera system, and the owner set up port forwarding to the DVR so it can be viewed remotely.
In which case, you're probably out of luck for doing something on your own using the camera feeds.