I made a GDPR request for my data shortly after the law was enacted, and they provided me with 280mb of data for the past 90 days of me listening to music.
wow that's impressive. I did a CCPA request and got 2.2MB (466KB zipped) of data from the last year which included listening history, playlists, and search history.
I don't do the fancy minute by minute adjustments to the color temperature; just a couple fixed settings for time of day and based on when the sun sets. And I just have it adjust a scene, which I have my Hue switches configured to use when I turn the lights on.
There's no good way to have this system work with, for example, turning on the lights through Alexa/Siri/etc since they won't use the Circadian scene that's been setup. But what I've got works well enough for now.
Not the OP but I use Kelvin for this, works great! It basically treats my Hue White Ambience bulbs like Flux, where they automatically dim and warm in the evenings. Those changes happen gradually over the course of minutes/hours so it's not jarring.
Whilst I was in China two years ago, someone mentioned that you can swap out the memory of an iPhone with one from another iPhone (e.g. water damaged) to get around an iCloud lock. So although it's quite sophisticated as a method, it's definitely doable.
You can use Mastercard and Visa in many high end ish places like Starbucks, upscale shopping centers (like Cocopark in Shenzhen), nice restaurants. Virtually all ATMs also support these cards.
Thanks. I will try more mainstream places. I found that even in some brands I still have to use my China Construction Bank debit card. I never had a problem getting out cash with my Visa debit card from an ATM. I just couldn't use the debit card at a lot of stores.
I built a microservice that does something similar[0] for Mailchimp. They have an API that requires a secret key, but we didn't want to keep a server running for it (and obviously didn't want anyone on the internet playing with our key). So I set up a little python service that serves a page and 'proxies' the API to the end user.
You could also do this simply by running on Azure Functions (free consumption plan). All you need to deploy is a simple proxies.json, see [1].
On the AWS side it appears you can entirely use API Gateway. Here [2] is a Swagger 2.0 definition file I just wrote which upon import creates an API endpoint that should proxy requests to an external API while adding your secret credentials.
Kiwi Campus is building the future of autonomous delivery robots. We're a young and ambitious team that has gone from early prototype to our third generation of robots in less than a year. Our robots drive semi-autonomously on the sidewalks of Berkeley, monitored by supervisors from Colombia. We're the company that's delivering the most orders by autonomous robots in the world.
We recently started using WebRTC to transmit video from Raspberry Pi's where I work. There were a lot of gotchas that weren't obvious to someone who's never worked with VOIP or related technology: STUN and TURN servers[0], 300 seconds idle timeouts that shouldn't affect the connection but killed the video stream regardless, and dropped calls which forced us to reboot the Pi.
In the end we managed to get something smooth working with UV4L[1] on a RPi costing us a fraction of the previous solution.
There needs to be some mechanism to tell you what the other P2P endpoints are and what address/port pairs they are listening to. It doesn't have to be a server necessarily, could be just a copy-paste string.