- cross-posted to:
- technews@radiation.party
- news_tech@lemmy.link
- cross-posted to:
- technews@radiation.party
- news_tech@lemmy.link
I like this device despite not having a use for it. It’s an interesting combination of tools and can see potential with penetration testing and the like. I’m curious what other people’s take is, especially if they’ve been hands on with it.
It’s been nice to copy hotel keys when I’m traveling. It really goes to show how easy it is.
But most of the time I just use it to emulate amiibos.
I also have a terrible remote for a ceiling fan. It eats through those super short batteries that are in garage door openers even if it’s never used. I recorded those sub ghz and just use the flipper now.
How do you emulate devices? Point the remote at the flipper and it reads the signal? Do you set up a ‘fan remote’ module and program every button one by one?
If so, that actually sounds awesome. I don’t have a tech heavy house, but sitting down for a movie requires 3 remotes (TV, sound bar, light dimmer). Being able to quickly do all 3 on one device would be great. Maybe not worth $170 alone, but I bet I could find many more uses.
Depends on the device. But generally you put the flipper into capture mode, then run an action on whatever you want to capture (i.e. press a button on the remote). If its IR you have to aim it at the flipper, if its sub-ghz you just hold the two near enough.
If you have enough of those wireless fans, think about getting a bond bridge (check they’re supported first though). I have mine for $99 and it’s controlling every ceiling fan+light in the house, hooked up to homeassistant locally (no cloud involved).
I regret not backing the kickstarter for this device, considering how well received it’s been. I had planned to and pulled out at the last minute
I did. But in the end the use I got out of this device is not much actually.
This makes waiting for mine to arrive even harder. Can’t wait!
I have one and I like toying around with it. Having a lil poke here and there.