| Base companies | Desk companies |
|---|---|
| Jiecang | Poppin, HON, Allsteel, AMQ, Enwork, Uplift, Haworth, Xybix, Hat Contract, Uncaged Ergonomics, Omnidesk, AITerminal, Fully(Herman Miller+Knoll), Funte, Desky |
| Kaidi | LTJ Kantoormeubelen, Teknion, OFS, Friant, Varidesk, BTOD |
| Loctek | Loctek, Flexispot(Loctek) |
| Timotion | Backbone, Humanconnect(FLH), Motti(Timotion), Autonomous SmartDesk, Trendway, Symmetry, DEZCTOP, Steelcase |
| OMT-Veyhl / LogicData(Jiecang) | Herman Miller, Haworth, Special T, iMovR, BTOD, DeskHaus |
| Linak | Steelcase, Ergonofis, Ikea, Xdesk, Inwerk, Charcoal, iMovR, Buldesk, Workrite, UpDesk |
| Actiforce | Steelcase |
| Conset | Conset, Flexiwork |
Few months ago, I've made a similar work but I wanted something a little more easier to manage. Please have a look at here for my previous work.
This time, I'm gonna do pretty much the same thing but using Pi-hole as base then modify it to include unbound and stubby.
This way, I can use the power of Pi-hole with some additional security layers:
- Recursive DNS check (
unbound) - DNS-over-TLS (
stubby)
| license: gpl-3.0 |
| version: '2.0' | |
| services: | |
| couchpotato: | |
| image: linuxserver/couchpotato | |
| ports: | |
| - 5050:5050 | |
| volumes: | |
| - couchpotato:/config:rw | |
| - movies:/movies:rw | |
| - downloads:/downloads:rw |
| import urllib | |
| import urllib2 | |
| import json | |
| def lambda_handler(event, context): | |
| url = 'https://rightgif.com/search/web' | |
| #!/bin/bash | |
| # | |
| # Helper functions | |
| # | |
| function pause(){ | |
| read -p "$*" | |
| } |
| #!/bin/bash | |
| # | |
| # Helper functions | |
| # | |
| function pause(){ | |
| read -p "$*" | |
| } |
Controlling your nodebot using a USB cable is great and all, and obviously you could shell out and grab a sparkcore or some other dedicated controller but what if you've got a standard arduino and you want to take an existing nodebot wireless?
Bluetooth is an option and there's this excellent JohnnyFive wiki entry that will help you there. Bluetooth can be a bit flaky though and it's range is pretty lousy. You can also look at things like XBees and what not using point to point serial, but these are expensive and very fiddly to get working.
Really, what we want is a method of transferring data over a nice, simple, standard method, requiring little configuration, low cost and we can utilise a whole stack of the code we've already produced.
Enter the WiFi232 module. These little beauties are [available from AliExpress for $12 each](http://www.aliexpress.com/item/USR-WIFI232-T-wifi-to-uart-tt