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[435.72 --> 439.96] And a better route planner can integrate with that and pull the state of charge off the car.
[440.26 --> 442.96] So therefore it'll, it'll update in real time.
[442.96 --> 446.50] So for example, like when I left to get down to Raleigh, the first time I said, I was going to
[446.50 --> 449.38] arrive, you know, my first destination with like 10% charge.
[449.38 --> 454.20] I got there with like 30 and I could see it counting back up as it, you know, at based
[454.20 --> 455.76] on the real time telemetry it was getting.
[456.38 --> 457.54] That's a legit feature.
[457.72 --> 459.62] I didn't actually, I didn't even think about it.
[459.72 --> 463.18] I didn't even realize that electric cars had ODB two ports.
[463.34 --> 466.26] I suppose they have to by law, but it just never even crossed my mind.
[466.34 --> 469.88] It just seems like such an old archaic, you know, the whole canvas thing just seems so
[469.88 --> 470.14] old.
[470.40 --> 472.84] You and I got burned by that automatic thing.
[472.90 --> 473.26] Do you remember?
[473.54 --> 477.98] Oh, I loved automatic too, even though they were sloping up all my data, but they tracked every drive
[477.98 --> 479.92] that I did in the RV for the first few years.
[480.08 --> 483.08] So I had this brilliant heat map of everywhere we had been in the RV.
[483.26 --> 484.30] It was, it was great.
[484.36 --> 486.30] And it got all my fuel mileage info for me.
[487.74 --> 488.82] I'd love to have that again.
[488.90 --> 492.10] We've talked about that a little bit on the show, trying to recreate that.
[492.88 --> 493.00] Yeah.
[493.26 --> 497.66] There's an app called Torque that I've been trying to play with that might let thing,
[497.80 --> 499.38] let me kind of upload it into home assistant.
[499.54 --> 503.98] I couldn't quite get it to work and I haven't had a chance to go back to it, but that would
[503.98 --> 507.60] supposedly let me upload that information directly into home assistant and have sensors
[507.60 --> 508.34] and data that way.
[508.40 --> 514.18] But honestly, I charge the car once a week, you know, on Sunday nights and a home assistant
[514.18 --> 518.72] will ping me if the battery's below, you know, I think 50% and, you know, I can go and plug
[518.72 --> 519.06] it in.
[519.14 --> 521.02] It'll charge up overnight in a couple hours.
[521.42 --> 526.98] And honestly, I basically, you're only supposed to charge about 80% at any given, you know,
[526.98 --> 530.20] you're only supposed to charge 100 if you're actually going to be going somewhere long distance.
[530.20 --> 533.74] So usually 80% is enough to get me through the entire week.
[534.12 --> 534.68] That's so cool.
[535.40 --> 536.62] So how about a seamless segue?
[536.92 --> 538.46] Shall we switch gears?
[539.08 --> 541.24] Oh, that was questionable.
[541.54 --> 541.66] Top gear.
[541.76 --> 542.30] Oh, yes.
[542.36 --> 542.70] Top gear.
[542.82 --> 543.28] Where's Jeremy?
[543.72 --> 547.38] I've been following your blog for a long time at blog.fuzzymissborn.com.
[547.62 --> 551.94] And there's so many posts on there that we could talk about, but there's one in particular,
[551.94 --> 555.50] which really has my interest peaked right now.
[555.56 --> 557.42] And that is the Renovate bot one.
[557.42 --> 563.26] I'm curious to ask you what you're using Renovate bot for and what your experience has been with
[563.26 --> 563.48] it.
[563.88 --> 570.14] So Renovate bot, I have run on my infrastructure Ansible GitHub repo.
[571.04 --> 574.28] And basically what it will do is it will go through.
[575.34 --> 578.18] I don't even, I don't even, I honestly, you can self host it.
[578.28 --> 579.04] I don't.
[579.48 --> 583.38] So I don't know how often the publicly hosted one goes through, but it's honestly pretty
[583.38 --> 583.76] fast.
[583.76 --> 588.32] It's like maybe in every hour or so it runs and it basically runs through whatever I tell
[588.32 --> 593.12] it to run through and will tell me, for example, for mine, it'll tell me if there's new Docker
[593.12 --> 593.94] images available.
[594.64 --> 599.18] You know, for all my Docker composed stuff, I'll, you know, state, you know, home assistant
[599.18 --> 604.48] slash, you know, whatever slash, what is, what is the 2022.05.01.
[604.48 --> 608.14] And it'll go through and say, oh, well, there's 0.02 available.
[608.34 --> 614.48] And it'll create a pull request on the infrastructure repo that I can then go in and say, yes, you
[614.48 --> 617.26] know, merge this or hang on.
[617.32 --> 620.96] This is actually a beta or, oh no, I'm seeing there are some issues with it.
[621.00 --> 624.90] So I don't actually have to merge it until I need to.
[624.90 --> 626.90] So what exactly does it do?
[627.04 --> 630.58] It's like a GitOps style way of working, right?
[630.64 --> 634.96] It looks at the upstream images and says, you know, there's a new home assistant container
[634.96 --> 638.06] and it creates a pull request, right?
[638.34 --> 639.44] Against your repo.
[639.66 --> 640.60] And then, and then what?
[640.96 --> 641.52] Basically that's it.
[641.54 --> 642.56] It creates a pull request.
[642.72 --> 646.76] I can see, you know, basically you can actually even, you can, you can customize.
[646.92 --> 649.08] I don't even honestly scratch the surface of what it can do.
[649.08 --> 652.52] So you can, you know, go ahead and auto merge, you know, minor update.
[652.64 --> 657.00] So if it's like, you know, a 0.01 release, you can tell it just to automatically merge
[657.00 --> 662.06] that for you, you know, and save the major revisions for, you know, manual review.
[662.94 --> 666.88] Or I mean, it honestly, I, I barely scratched the surface on what it can do.
[666.94 --> 671.76] I know, I know a lot of people use it for maintaining their dependencies for all the different,
[671.82 --> 672.44] you know, projects.
[672.44 --> 675.28] They'll use it for, and they'll have just renovate bot, go through and just automatically
[675.28 --> 679.10] update and merge a lot of the dependency upgrades.
[680.06 --> 686.08] Now, another post that you have on your blog is your love, hate relationship with drone.io.
[686.28 --> 689.32] But before we get there, and because you mentioned Top Gear a moment ago,
[689.88 --> 693.84] we do have the Top Gear style leaderboard storage question,
[693.98 --> 698.12] which one of our amazing listeners has added to the self-hosted wiki.
[698.68 --> 701.24] So what we're going to do is set some rules, right?
[701.38 --> 702.68] It's raw storage.
[702.68 --> 706.12] How much raw storage do you have on your LAN?
[707.02 --> 708.72] I'm going to maybe cheat a little bit.
[708.78 --> 714.30] So I have about 10 terabytes that I store off-site with the, you know, external hard drive that I
[714.30 --> 716.68] leave in the office, you know, at works.
[716.80 --> 718.28] That way I have, you know, cold storage.
[718.52 --> 721.74] So if we include that, it's about 80 terabytes.
[722.26 --> 724.64] But we don't include that because we literally just said on your LAN.
[725.38 --> 729.76] I know, but, but it's on my LAN for like, you know, a couple hours a month.
[729.76 --> 733.28] Unless, unless we count tail scale as the LAN these days.
[733.52 --> 734.32] So who knows?
[734.72 --> 735.36] Oh boy.
[735.52 --> 736.40] What do we think audience?