@[email protected] @[email protected] seemed accurate to me, not that I climbed up for a closer look ๐
It's San Francisco. Nobody seems to care about the "nudity".
@[email protected] @[email protected] seemed accurate to me, not that I climbed up for a closer look ๐
It's San Francisco. Nobody seems to care about the "nudity".
@[email protected] for the benefit of people not named Matt Blaze, it's called BRIJJ (pronounced "bridge") because it's at the San Mateo Bridge, so on approach to the 28s you cross BRIJJ at the point that you cross the actual bridge.
@couch1potato @shortwavesurfer yeah this is where you start to have the hard decisions. If it's an old unit, you might be better off overall with a new Midea, from the reduced noise and energy consumption alone. And those can be directly controlled by HA.
Or you can treat your current unit like a beater and run it into the ground first with the switched outlet.
Or you can get a longer life out of the current unit by buying remote controlled relays and wiring them in where the existing switches are.
All three options have their pluses and minuses.
@jaharkes @shortwavesurfer yep. You start there and see if it's good enough, and then iterate. That way you're not overengineering it. The more inputs you use to have the automation decide things, the more opportunities there are for the automation to break.
@[email protected] @[email protected] and many of them are bedrock. The scary places to be are the Marina, eastern downtown, and Mission Bay. Those areas get liquefaction in earthquakes.
@[email protected] the destruction of the original Penn Station was a tragedy of epic proportions. More significant even than the destruction of the Western Addition in San Francisco or the Seattle Hotel in Seattle. All of those, though, were the turning points for preservation of culturally important architecture in their respective cities.
@[email protected] I used to enjoy listening to radio stations from over a thousand miles away when I was a kid. They still played music on AM back then.