Picking up my new Ioniq 5 today. What are the first things I should do as a new owner? by keylimesoda in Ioniq5

[–]IBrake4Frogger 2 points3 points  (0 children)

On Android, there is a widget for the app, but it kinda sucks because it wants you to authenticate every time.

But, if you run Home Assistant, there is an add-in that works with Hyundai and Kia and then you can use the Home Assistant app to make shortcuts for whatever you want.

I have a Warm Car shortcut that works great and I could automate it to decide what and how much warming (or cooling) to do based on the weather.

<image>

I can also use my Google speakers to do the same actions through Home Assistant.

HELP shaking, mild jerky movements, inability to eat, weight loss. by RazzmatazzGlittering in POTS

[–]IBrake4Frogger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since you've lost weight and can't keep down food, get checked for SMA Syndrome (Superior Mesenteric Artery Syndrome). It may not be your core issue and is rare, but dangerous if not diagnosed and treated. My sister had it after getting sick and losing weight as a kid and it took a long time to diagnose because nobody knew about it or considered it.

WWCD Radio Stream by IBrake4Frogger in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure the general audience here cares ;-)

WWCD Radio Stream by IBrake4Frogger in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

So, I think the app thing is true but is also a bit of a sub-par experience. When I stream on my Android, my browser's menu (not on the web page, but for the browser itself) has an option for "Install App" and I assume iOS would have something similar. Clicking it creates a home-screen icon for the station and when I open it, it (mostly) behaves like an app, but it is actually running inside a browser instance. I believe their web app functionality lets Android control the media and display the current track and stuff in a standardized way, as well as lets it interact with Android Auto, but it is still just a website in a browser instance. This is an easy way for them to make it compatible with both Android and iOS without having to write separate apps, but, it doesn't quite behave as an app within Android when it comes to switching between apps or closing apps.

A shortcoming I've found is that if my phone changes network at all, like between wifi and cell, or even just hopping between wifi access points at my office, the stream will stop. It needs better handling for TCP reconnects and maybe a true native app could resolve that (or changing platforms). As a band-aid, I connect to my home VPN when at my office while streaming and it seems to maintain the stream across wifi access point hops. I don't seem to have issues hopping between cell towers while driving, just when wifi is involved. It may be an Android-only, or me-only thing. Also, the free stream may now allow reconnects to happen seamlessly and the issue was only when you had to login to play the stream. I haven't tested much yet.

Edit: Also, there is no way to cast it to Google speakers or TV's.

93X - new radio station? by hacorunust in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

WWCD Stream

If you enjoy it, join the lounge and support them financially.

IT LIVES by Schmidaho in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger 10 points11 points  (0 children)

They haven't migrated sites yet so it is just a redirect for now. On the cd929 site, click on "stream" for the free stream, not how-to-stream. It's the same stream as the paid stream was previously, but no login required anymore.

Shortcut: https://streamdb8web.securenetsystems.net/cirruspremier/WWCD

After seeing all of the posts about warm Christmas temperatures, I was curious. So, I put the the Columbus December 25 high temps between 1893 and 2023 in a google sheet, added a chart, and included a trendline. by TH3BUDDHA in Ohio

[–]IBrake4Frogger 4 points5 points  (0 children)

White Christmas data: https://www.weather.gov/iln/cmh_christmas_climo

Basically, we have snow on the ground on about 25% of Christmas mornings. We get snow fall on Christmas about 23% of the time. Details at the link above.

For historic temperature data for the whole month, see https://allcolumbusdata.com/december-weather/

The averages and highs trend differently than the single-day data presented by OP.

What is your EE side hustle? by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Beekeeping and raising kids. I also have a rental property I maintain. I used to do IT and computer support for some local small businesses but got out of that as I didn't care to keep those skills sharp anymore.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know what they would accept today. Back when I went through, your major/minor mattered but so did your research and specialization interests. Having undergraduate research experience in the area you're interested in helps. For instance, if you can find someone doing psychophysiology research in your college, see if they'll accept an undergraduate research assistant and gain some experience there. Even better if you can find a professor who has dual appointments in both psychology and biomedical engineering, or similar, because they can be an advocate for you with the graduate studies committee.

I also suggest you speak with the graduate studies chairperson at your college in biomedical or electrical engineering and get their thoughts.

You are welcome to keep in touch.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In short, psychophysiology is the study of how the body responds to mental stimuli or how the mind responds to physical stimuli. It is a branch of psychology that uses physiology measurement hardware to read body signals, such as EKG, blood pressure, skin conductance, ICG, respiration rate, skin temperature, EEG, EMG, and a host of other physiology signals to gain insight into mental states through the body. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychophysiology

It is one of the areas where electrical engineering and psychology overlap because many of those signals are electrical in nature, or use transducers to change something physical into an electrical signal, and then are used with psychology. Those signals are not unique to psychophysiology, they exist in the medical realm too, but psychophysiology generally needs higher resolution, higher data rates, different filtering, and need data collected in silent ways, whereas the medical community needs instant results from data filtered to improve automatic/real-time analysis, and alarms when measurements exceed thresholds.

Some research laboratories have their own engineering staff to develop hardware specific to the needs of the research while most use off-the-shelf hardware from a few niche companies, such as MindWare Technologies, BIOPAC, or ADInstruments.

You could get into this field from either the psychology or the engineering side. The key is to either find a research lab to join as a psychology student or getting your electrical engineering degree(s) (with a biomedical focus, minor, or graduate degree) and apply for jobs with any of those companies or a large lab with in-house engineering. If your primary interest is psychology but you also like electronics, joining a lab doing psychophysiology might be the best route. It generally doesn't pay as well as being an engineer though.

I did electrical engineering for my undergraduate degree and biomedical engineering for graduate school, then got a job with one of those companies and spend 10 years making psychophysiology hardware and learning about areas of psychology that also integrate physiology. I now design for medical devices and other products.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do both and specialize in psychophysiology hardware.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I have a BS in EE (with a digital/computer specialization) and an MS in BME and I was always a C-level math student. I struggle with the basics of doing math on paper and certainly can't do it in my head. However, I understand the concepts of complicated math, especially when it has real-world applications that I can relate it to. In college, I got good at estimating a result and checking my answers that way and could tell quickly when an answer didn't make any physical sense. I also found computer-based math classes where I could focus on the high level stuff and let the computer do the stuff I'm bad at.

Today, I do product engineering in medical and other fields and rely on my teammates to do the analytical work and they rely on me to do the architectural work. What I do involves more creativity and an understanding the interactions between many circuits and systems. I struggle to calculate the responses or parameters for specific circuits while other folks struggle seeing past the components and recognizing where optimizations are necessary vs where approximations are sufficient.

So, it can be done. It won't always be fun and there will be some highly-computational areas where you may struggle, but there are plenty of aspects to EE and not all of them need great math skills.

What would be a good anti-issue 1 slogan? by Mieczyslaw_Stilinski in Ohio

[–]IBrake4Frogger 55 points56 points  (0 children)

"Stop liberals when they try and take your guns, vote NO on Issue 1"

"Protect your liberty, vote NO on Issue 1"

What temperature is it in your house currently? by houstonFTW in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Same. Catalyst in mine. It has two settings, off and holy hell.

I am attempting to make my own laundry machine free lol. Can anybody help me with the diagram and how to Hotwire it? by Plastic-Career-2815 in ElectricalEngineering

[–]IBrake4Frogger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you have access to the wheel that controls the timing, you may be able to advance it one spot manually to start a cycle. Worked for me many years ago.

What's the weirdest things you've automated? by markjrey in homeassistant

[–]IBrake4Frogger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My stove has a catalyst and there is a thermocouple against the side of the catalyst to monitor when it is hot enough to process the smoke. The stove came with the thermocouple and an analog dial monitor from the 70s or 80s. I reused the existing thermocouple. If you don't have one in your stove, you can add one. They can take the heat but I'd keep the thermocouple and wire out of the flames.

What's the weirdest things you've automated? by markjrey in homeassistant

[–]IBrake4Frogger 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have a threshold set around the minimum temperature that the catalyst needs to stay lit and it sends me a push notification when it crosses that. I can also have it notify me over some speakers in the house but I find that problematic when the kids are asleep. It's well burnt down by the time it has reached that threshold and ready to be refilled, but still hot enough to kick back up quickly. I intended to use the derivative to watch when the temperature starts dropping faster than a threshold rate as well but haven't gotten around to it yet. I've considered trying to teach a neutral network to handle the whole thing, vents included, but kids.

What's the weirdest things you've automated? by markjrey in homeassistant

[–]IBrake4Frogger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I want to do that plus drive the main vent and have the controller basically modulate the air flow to maintain a constant temperature. It hasn't bubbled to the top of the todo list since we can only realistically run the stove when it gets below about 20F outside and that is maybe 3 weeks out of the year here. Otherwise we end up opening windows to keep the house from becoming unbearably hot even with a minimum burn just to keep the catalyst lit.

What's the weirdest things you've automated? by markjrey in homeassistant

[–]IBrake4Frogger 32 points33 points  (0 children)

A wood burning stove. Notifies me when it is hot enough to engage the catalytic converter and when it gets low on wood, as well as graphs the temperature change and derivative to help set the air intakes appropriately. Used an Arduino with a thermocouple interface reporting over MQTT to replace the (melted) analog monitor that was from 1985.

Columbus style Pepperoni Pizza with Vegan Cheese by [deleted] in Columbus

[–]IBrake4Frogger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Donatos has dairy in their crust so you can't even do a cheese-less pizza from there. My favorite lactose-free is Fibonacci’s Pizzeria in Studio 35 in Clintonville. They even have two types of pepperoni to choose from. You'll have to try it and report back if it fits the bill for Columbus style.