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[1798.76 --> 1801.54] is they can take logs from any source and make them usable.
[1801.86 --> 1804.20] You don't have to constantly massage the format.
[1804.54 --> 1805.74] It doesn't need a schema.
[1805.74 --> 1807.98] You just pump them all into Humio,
[1808.18 --> 1809.60] and they're there when you need them,
[1809.76 --> 1811.80] and the dashboard to review it all is great.
[1812.32 --> 1813.52] Humio's platform is crazy.
[1814.08 --> 1818.20] Their index-free architecture means you can ingest over a petabyte of data per day
[1818.20 --> 1820.06] and search that with sub-second latency.
[1820.70 --> 1824.18] And Humio's up to 80% cheaper than the competing platforms like Splunk or Elastic,
[1824.60 --> 1826.82] thanks to its reduced hardware and computational footprint.
[1826.82 --> 1831.12] I think the best way for our audience to get going is probably the community edition.
[1831.76 --> 1836.84] Humio community edition is the largest no-cost data ingestion offering on the market today,
[1837.38 --> 1840.48] allowing you to ingest up to 16 gigs per day,
[1841.02 --> 1842.38] seven-day retention included.
[1842.48 --> 1843.56] It's not a trial period.
[1844.02 --> 1845.18] You get it for the long haul.
[1845.58 --> 1847.70] This is perfect for us self-hosters because, yeah,
[1847.98 --> 1850.22] you can put your home assistant logs in there.
[1850.38 --> 1852.06] You can put your Nginx logs in there.
[1852.14 --> 1854.34] Like I said earlier, you can put just about anything in there,
[1854.58 --> 1855.90] and Humio knows what to do with it.
[1855.90 --> 1857.70] It gives you the ability to bring all that stuff together,
[1858.24 --> 1861.20] view it in one place, and that makes troubleshooting easier.
[1861.56 --> 1863.68] It's so much better than having separate places to look
[1863.68 --> 1865.06] when you need to figure out what went wrong.
[1865.38 --> 1866.34] That's amateur stuff.
[1867.08 --> 1868.58] Go get like a pro setup, right?
[1868.62 --> 1871.48] Because when this is your home setup, it's your hobby,
[1872.06 --> 1873.50] you don't want to have to fight with it.
[1873.60 --> 1874.60] You just want the information.
[1874.82 --> 1876.00] You want to be able to fix it quick.
[1876.32 --> 1877.10] You want it easy.
[1877.26 --> 1877.92] You want it usable.
[1878.12 --> 1879.80] You don't want it to be another job.
[1880.16 --> 1882.44] That's where Humio community edition could be perfect.
[1882.44 --> 1887.46] So go get started for free at humio.com slash H-C-E.
[1887.60 --> 1892.40] That's H-U-M-I-O dot com slash H-C-E.
[1892.40 --> 1896.44] So you're all aboard the Zigbee train now.
[1896.52 --> 1898.30] That seems to have left the station.
[1899.06 --> 1902.28] Yeah, I was like trying so hard not to,
[1902.32 --> 1903.62] because I already got a lot of Z-Wave,
[1903.98 --> 1905.44] and I've already got Wi-Fi devices.
[1905.74 --> 1907.74] Do I really need a third network, Alex?
[1907.80 --> 1908.44] The answer is no.
[1909.10 --> 1909.32] No.
[1909.64 --> 1910.26] No, I do not.
[1910.78 --> 1912.22] But yeah, that doesn't stop me anyways.
[1912.78 --> 1915.54] This one really was because I'd tried everything else,
[1916.28 --> 1919.08] and after last week's episode,
[1919.08 --> 1922.28] I got a couple of notes almost immediately after the episode went out.
[1922.44 --> 1923.02] They were just like,
[1923.78 --> 1926.16] hey, you got to check out the Aquara temperature sensor.
[1926.72 --> 1928.90] It's Zigbee, but it's battery powered,
[1929.04 --> 1931.04] and it gives you real-time data.
[1931.38 --> 1934.26] As the temperature changes, it sends in updates.
[1934.78 --> 1936.40] You know, it's not this problem where it falls asleep
[1936.40 --> 1939.94] and drops off the network like you had with the Shelly H&T.
[1940.64 --> 1942.50] And so I thought, all right,
[1942.52 --> 1945.94] I've been wanting to get, you know, on the Zigbee train and just try it.
[1945.98 --> 1947.64] I knew eventually I wanted to give it a go,
[1947.64 --> 1950.04] and I'm thinking about replacing my Z-Wave devices,
[1950.18 --> 1952.20] and if Zigbee worked out, that'd probably be for the best.
[1952.68 --> 1955.28] So I grabbed the Aquara temperature and humidity sensor
[1955.28 --> 1959.84] and grabbed a Conbee Zigbee stick,
[1959.94 --> 1961.64] which is like a German Zigbee stick,
[1961.92 --> 1964.24] which just works out of the box with Home Assistant.
[1964.90 --> 1966.78] And I got to say, Alex, this is the one.
[1967.46 --> 1968.74] This is the one.
[1968.92 --> 1970.10] I really like this.
[1970.16 --> 1972.74] I think it's based on the same Yaome chipset
[1972.74 --> 1973.88] that a lot of these are based on.
[1973.88 --> 1977.48] And it has two years of battery life,
[1977.64 --> 1982.14] which is outrageous because the things about the size of a bottle cap,
[1982.42 --> 1983.38] you know, it's only square.
[1983.68 --> 1985.50] It's super, super small.
[1985.62 --> 1987.46] It's also the smallest temperature sensor
[1987.46 --> 1990.42] of all of the ones that I've tried.
[1990.82 --> 1993.84] It says on the box requires the Aquara hub.
[1994.04 --> 1996.88] That just means it needs a Zigbee device to connect you.
[1996.88 --> 1998.54] So once you put it on the Zigbee network,
[1998.62 --> 2000.50] which takes about a millisecond,
[2000.58 --> 2003.02] you just pull the battery, little plastic separator,
[2003.14 --> 2005.98] and click the button when you're in discover mode in Zigbee,
[2006.10 --> 2007.90] and it's connected immediately.
[2008.18 --> 2009.18] What are you using for Zigbee?
[2009.42 --> 2010.42] Are you using ZHA?
[2010.98 --> 2012.60] Yeah, I'm using the built-in, yeah.
[2013.00 --> 2013.92] And it's been fine.
[2014.02 --> 2017.42] You know, it's cleaner and nicer than the Z-Wave stuff is.
[2017.48 --> 2019.00] Of course, I'm using the older Z-Wave stuff.
[2019.68 --> 2021.38] And Zigbee itself, I like.
[2021.38 --> 2024.80] One of the things that I think is fantastic about it is
[2024.80 --> 2027.36] when you add wired devices,
[2028.06 --> 2029.42] you know, permanently powered devices,
[2029.64 --> 2031.00] like a smart plug,
[2031.50 --> 2032.80] just like Z-Wave,
[2033.04 --> 2035.40] it builds the network out more.
[2035.52 --> 2037.28] They become repeaters out there.
[2037.52 --> 2040.08] It has about a 100-meter line-of-sight range.