• Dyskolos
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    252 days ago

    That’s why I try to make dumb things smart, not replace the dumb with smart. Like, make the switch smart, not the bulb.

      • @tempest@lemmy.ca
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        172 days ago

        Can’t lock people into some service if you do that. They gotta have that recurring monthly revenue.

    • I agree with the overall sentiment, but a smart switch would be harder to change than a smart bulb most of the time. Smart switch would require electrical work to replace. A smart bulb can just be swapped. If anything the toilet is a good proxy. A smart flush means it won’t manually flush. If they had done a smart fill you could just manually fill the tank with water.

      • @ironhydroxide@sh.itjust.works
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        72 days ago

        Not necessarily. The “smart” necessarily causes some real world movent (opens a valve). Just design the physical action to be able to be performed both manually and electrically.

        • In this post it seems as though smart is being used to mean completely replacing the thing. I think that having both smart and dumb options is ideal, but in this particular context I think the reference point is that the smart object does not allow a manual override.

      • @Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml
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        42 days ago

        To be fair, if you had a water supply you could just chuck buckets of water down your toilet if the flush wasn’t working.

      • Dyskolos
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        32 days ago

        True, but you could also add a switchbot to it. Ugly but simple and without electrical maintenance needed.