Yes.
Why? Just because it needs lot of space?
Or migration will take lot of time & will need a lot of free space?
I would agree that it could be not crucial to know EXACT (not statistical) value of some “temperature” on 01.01.2022; but in SOME scenarios like “show me my track in London from 01.01.2020” could be useful.
- Size
- Not a time series DB, not suited for this amount of data, will probably cause performance issues.
The default is 10 days for a reason.
If you want state data that goes back a long way
i.e. only performance issues.
If someone wants to have 900 days recorded & if he/she provided a powerful hardware setup - then he/she would expect a smooth operability.
Read the rest:
That’s it. Nothing further.
FYI, the link to the nest integration 2024.9 blog post goes to a 404 (https://www.home-assistant.io/blog/2024/09/04/release-20249/integrations/nest), but likely should go to Google Nest - Home Assistant
edit I tried my first pull request to fix this, but I am unsure how to do this. Maybe if someone smarter than me achieves it, you can detail how you did it!
Just wanted to say thanks for removing the binary sensor for “Update available” for the TP-Link Smart Home integration, this did cause me some issues and I appreciate you keeping on top of these things.
Keep up the great work and thanks for keeping our home schedules private and out of particular companies clouds where possible, I hated knowing that I was contributing to Philips Hue’s statistics amongst others, its great that my hue integration is no longer in the cloud and I no longer have to worry about people making pie charts of what time I tuned on the bathroom light, or how many times the lights were turned on during the night and at what time and for how long, now I feel safe knowing my peeing habits are no longer making people any money. Look forward to the day Hive is no longer reliant on the cloud.
Also I’m looking forward to getting my Home Assistant’s Assist to believe it’s from Alien and is the actual computer called MU-TH-UR 6000 from the Nostromo. That will be very cool.
Thanks guys and girls for this great project in the name of privacy…
Thanks for the update, HA team. Just wanted to say how much I appreciate the direction HA is moving in, with the foundation, the certifications, and even an apparently small thing like the open source compliance check in this update. Staying and even improving on the straight and narrow!
And all the while making things easier for the less tech-savvy, and better-looking too. Great work.
ALL of my Automations disappeared after the update… rolling back to 2024.8.3 without restoring data made them appear again. Not sure if this is a fluke. Guess I’ll try again when 2024.9.1 releases.
FINALLY! Wide columns! This is what I’ve been waiting for to start updating my other dashboards. The only thing missing so far is adjusting the amount of padding between columns. On small displays, I like to use as much real estate as possible to maximize size.
Looks like we really do need a hive integration that’s not reliant on the cloud. I spoke too soon, lost my hive integration after install, can’t live without being able to control the heating, hot water and my various hive plugs from home assistant, restored to 2024.8.3, I shall have to look forward to the removal of the “Update available” , binary sensor for the TP-Link Smart Home integration in a future release. Thanks guys and girls, much appreciated…
If I have an August and a Yale lock, and both of them are connected to my August account and I exclusively use the August Android app, should I continue to use the August integration for the Yale lock, or switch to the Yale integration?
Update seemed to break my Amber Electrical integration: error given is: “no general channel configured”. an uninstall and reinstall didnt fix it. Rolled back to 2024.8.3 and all good again.
Love to see the energy dashboard expanded even more with price per device and current power usage.
Oh, and please also consider expanding water use in the energy dashboard to water usage per device as well for those who have multiple water meters.
agreed, Water usage it´s primordial and everyday more expensive and necessary to manage the consumption
Just updated to 2024.9
My NSPanel PROs running home assistant app 2024.7.3-minimal have been acting up. (Android 8.1)
When they try to load the dashboard they the app reopens and gets stuck in the loop of opening dashboard / reopening app. Tried clearing cache/data from the apps and restarting, but doesnt help.
Any idea what could cause this?
Do you know if this is possible to create a sensor from this untracked consumption?
Thank you for another step in making HA better, again!
I’m really impressed every time in what this wonderful piece of software is able to do.
Since I very rarely had an issue in jumping on the new version, I always install the new major version asap.
Having the option to go back from my backup, makes this decision even more very easy.
So now, again, even it was late when I entered, I installed 2024.9
One of the reasons for installing every new release is my curiosity and enthusiasm but it’s also because of supporting the development/progress by using them.
I do have 1 issue for which I cannot find the reason.
The screenshot is from a dashboard for my 7" RPi touchscreen (Raspbian w/ Chromium)
This is taken from the browser on my desktop.
On the RPi the 2 vertical stacks are on top of each other instead side-by-side.
If I make make my browser (on the desktop) smaller, the stacks stay side-by-side, even by making the cards smaller quite a lot until the right one switches to the bottom.
I don’t know if this is important: I’m using sections.
Now that untracked consumption is also shown, so you see your total consumption in the energy graph for individual devices, it would be nice to have a bar with solar energy self consumed and solar energy returned to grid right next to each existing bar.
That way you can easily see how much of the total consumption is from your solar, and how much is from the net, not in absolute numbers, but visually.
You can also see how much energy was returned to net, but could be self consumed, for example by using a battery.