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All those articles are 2+ years old. Might as well get your tech info from your Encyclopedia Brittanica's.
Um, some basic voice processing is done locally in the device, but without the computing power and the vast database in the cloud, these digital assistants would not be able to do much. Take Alexa offline and she will be as dumb as a door stop.
The whole point is that Alexa should not need the IP to execute a command like "lock the front door" or "set the thermostat to 72°". It should open a portal to the cloud only when you ask it to do that, explicitly. And, it should not take that opportunity to upload everything it has recorded for the last 3 days, either.
Sorry, I do not understand "throw switch 23". Did you mean to say throw turnout 23?
You're very very wrong @Point353
Ummmmmm no...... it's throwing the switch. You're very very wrong @Point353 We use switch in the 1:1. You throw a switch stand when lining a switch, the dispatcher gives me permission to take the power switch on hand when im
Ummmmmm no...... it's throwing the switch. You're very very wrong @Point353 We use switch in the 1:1. You throw a switch stand when lining a switch, the dispatcher gives me permission to take the power switch on hand when im breaking down the wiring of a switch machine, i get switch yes on my authorities so i have permission inside of a control point, etc. It's a switch. The switch allows you to travel down the normal or reverse side of the turnout. Drasko
Well, wrong is wrong. Not sure how someone can be very very wrong...But Drasko is right in that, in the 1:1 world, you throw a switch... which is part of a turnout.
I think that Point353 knows that and he was just doing some friendly trolling.
Again, tell it to the NMRA: https://www.nmra.org/beginner/trackwork
Again, tell it to the NMRA: https://www.nmra.org/beginner/trackwork Ibid.Still trying to get a handle on that emoji thing.
I actually live in the perfect use case: my house has almost every light wired through switches that make little sense and many rooms can be entered from numerous directions. I really wish I could just walk into the kitchen and say "Alexa, turn on the kitchen" and have it happen. It'll also be nice to have it automatically turn things off at certain times because, well, I just got a $450 electric bill! These things seem like minor conveniences, and they are, but when they work right, they can definitely make life easier when you add them all up.