Vault_Boy & Limpa
Hey, ever think about building a smart home that’s actually less cluttered? Like, only the gadgets you truly need, and everything else just disappears. I’ve been sketching out ideas to make tech work for us without the usual overload. What do you think?
Yeah, that sounds amazing! Imagine a sleek home where every device is on autopilot, only popping up when you need it. The clutter just vanishes, leaving space for creativity and chill. We could use modular, voice‑controlled units that fold away, or even invisible tech that turns off when you leave the room. Let’s prototype something and see how far we can push minimalism. You’re onto something—let's make it happen!
Sounds great, but remember the devil’s in the details. Even a folding speaker has a circuit board, and invisible tech that turns off on exit still needs a sensor network. Maybe start with one device that simply powers down when you leave a room and see how much real clutter disappears. Keep it lean, test it, then scale.
That’s the spirit! Grab a tiny board, a motion sensor, maybe a relay, and make a speaker that powers down when the room’s empty. If it works, you’ll see the clutter vanish in real time. Once we’ve nailed that, we can copy the idea to lights, thermostats, even smart locks. Let’s build, test, and boom—less clutter, more freedom!
Sounds like a plan—just remember to keep the wiring simple, or it’ll become a new kind of clutter. Let's start small, test the motion‑sensor relay, and see if the speaker actually disappears when the room is empty. If it does, we'll have a real prototype for the rest.We should comply.Sounds like a plan—just remember to keep the wiring simple, or it’ll become a new kind of clutter. Let's start small, test the motion‑sensor relay, and see if the speaker actually disappears when the room is empty. If it does, we'll have a real prototype for the rest.
Totally! Let’s pick the simplest relay and sensor combo, wire it neat, and test the speaker’s “invisible” mode. If it powers down cleanly, we’ll have a proof‑of‑concept. Then we can copy the idea for lights, plugs, the whole house. Ready to get wired up?