![]() ![]() Super easy to install and basically zero support ever if you do it right. (FWIW - I ‘love’ the weewx Belchertown skin and driver for this if you just want a WF display. With one exception, everything is done in Docker on the same i3 NUC but I used to run everything on the same pi3 so compute isn’t an issue at all, it’s just that dockerizing made it simpler to set up and support.īottom line is that if you have ‘any’ dashboard that is web-based, you have a $49 US problem to get it to display. I could also trigger sound if I wanted, but I didn’t enable that. Bar charts change color based on the values. Temps at the bottom are from a bunch of $12 Ecowitt T+H sensors and a $35 gw1000 gateway via another weewx instance also feeding MQTT.Ĭolors of sensors change to red when the door/window is open.Door/window sensors are Ecolink ZWave via the HA integration.AQI is from HA querying the PurpleAir REST interface.Temp/Hum/Rain are from a weewx Davis VP2 instance I have elsewhere on the LAN feeding a MQTT broker.Dashboard is Home Assistant using the TileBoard add-on.installed FullyKiosk free and set it to the URL to display.get the fire7 on the network and let Amazon update it to current.If it doesn’t have the option, perhaps deleting and re-installing the WF app will clear the old saved data up? Either way, make sure that you know your WF login name and password before you do this, since you will need to login to the app again after the saved data is erased… Long story short, if you’re running the WF Android app 24/7 and start to notice it slowing down after a year or so, see if the OS settings app has an option to wipe saved data for a specific app and use it to clean things up. Wiping the cache didn’t improve things, but erasing the saved data (over 200 megs of it) and logging back in to the WF app made the ancient 7" Fire run like new again! I was poking around the Amazon OS settings app, and noticed that they included option buttons to wipe the cache and stored data of individual apps. Tablet is underpowered because of its price, but still very useful. ![]() Before attempting to root your Amazon Fire, double-check the instructions to ensure theyre compatible with your device and Fire OS version. Its very easy to do, you don't lose any functionality and you can reverse it. On your Fire tablet, go to Settings > Device Options > Backup & restore, enable Backup & restore, and manually back up your data to have a fallback option in case your device gets bricked. It was so bad last night that it could no longer switch between stations or even go back from viewing a graph. ago haha just learned its called rooting right after i posted this Markaes4 Absolutely. I assumed that Amazon’s software bloat over the years was making the WF app run increasingly slower as time passed. Interesting discovery about my ancient 5th gen 7" Fire tablet that has been running the WF Android app betas 24/7 since the early field test days. ![]()
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