Wi-Fi is one of the best inventions of the modern era. It connects almost everything in our lives today. But Wi-Fi isnât the only wireless signal in your home. There are many different wireless protocols, and when too many are active, they can interfere with each other. This can slow your network down â sometimes even to a snailâs pace.
Even the Wi-Fi from your neighbors can interfere with your own. And if you have a smart home, youâve probably heard of protocols like Thread or Zigbee, which add even more signals into the mix.
In a digital environment, it is easy to go faster. In the age of AI, things go even faster. But that speed does you no good if you donât know what you are doing, because you end up copying and pasting the information. You donât know what you just said, and you will forget it in a few hours. I think people should write more and practice. According to Science Daily, workers were 25% faster on paper than on an electronic device (âStudy Shows Stronger Brain Activityâ). The article says that a notebook is not uniform in pen strokes, has limited space, and is a physical item to keep track of. Digital notes are infinite in spacing and easily closed, so when you close the app, it is out of sight, out of mind. This reminds me of a quote that I once heard: â To go faster, you first need to slow down,â which means to step back and look at it objectively, but with the digital tool, you donât step back and see it differently. I know the convenience of the available digital tools, and you have them anywhere via the cloud. A notebook is not easily searchable, and they are bulky to carry, especially if you go bigger than an A5-size notebook. In contrast, a notebook enables faster deep understanding than a digital app.
sometime in the past year of two i have boaut a 42inch monitor and itâs is my primary display this is a chech up on if i reqreat my purchuse. youtube linkes will be down blow the blog.
Yes and no â I love the big monitor. I even took the smaller monitor off the side of my desk for it. But I donât like it as much as I thought I would. Itâs large, and while thatâs great in some ways, many of its features would honestly work better if they were split into separate devices for a variety of reasons.
August 8, 2025 :: Casey Robinson
#tech
Sometimes itâs the little things that make life easier. Here are a few small purchases Iâve made recently that have been surprisingly useful in my day-to-day.
Rating: ââââââââââ (7/10)
Tags: TV-MA, Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Action, Adventure, Slice of Life, Fan Service, Comedy
High School DxD is a manga adaptation of the popular anime series. To my knowledge, it doesnât fully complete the first seasonâs story arc, but it still makes for a pretty enjoyable read.
The series follows the anime closely in the beginning but tapers off slightly toward the end. Thankfully, the changes arenât major, so it doesnât feel jarring if youâre reading the manga after watching the anime.
August 17, 2025 :: Casey Robinson
#Productivity
people are making there smart home wrong because we gave them the wrong ideas. why i say that it is because we have marked it as a smart speaker that dose it all. that we will have a JARVIS that will make it all work like what we see in iron man. that idea is not bad but we are doing something that is not going to work for the long jevery but fast and not a hastel. but i shoud be clear that i am not a expert in a smart home but i do know that we see it as wee speak to a google home or a Alexa. with that is not the ancer becasuse of 2 reations.
I have a smart home for a few reasons, but they mainly come down to creativity and being hands-off.
To be honest, I donât see someone owning an Alexa or another smart speaker as truly having a smart homeâthatâs just a fancy light switch. And apps arenât the full answer either.
Do I need a smart home? Noâplenty of people live without one.
But as a nerd who values productivity and the ease of walking into a room without doing anything, Iâm a power user. I self-host my own system with Home Assistant, which makes my setup both hands-off in daily use and hands-on when it comes to building and maintaining it.
Everyone seems to have a different definition of a âsmart home.â For some, itâs asking Alexa to turn on the lights. For others, itâs having dozens of sensors and automations running quietly in the background. But right now, what passes as âsmartâ in the consumer market often feels half-baked.
From my perspective, there are three big problems holding smart homes backâand unless these are fixed, the term âsmart homeâ will remain misleading.