I’ve done a lot of reworking of our computers and network recently and thought I’d
post some details about the various physical and digital parts that make our humble
WiredPrairie home work.
Using Google Docs, I created a labeled diagram with most of the moving parts of our
house (WOW, Google Docs Drawing is an amazingly decent vector drawing editor!). I’ve intentionally left off some of the noise including PCs and
laptops, and a few unloved devices.
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A) DSL modem. The connection to the Internet. We’ve had a flaky Internet
connection over the years and have had to replace our DSL modem multiple times,
but as our Internet service includes unlimited service and repairs, it’s not
been a huge issue. We live in a rural area and our only choice is DSL (or
expensive satellite service). It’s a 2 line modem to help improve reliability
and upload bandwidth.
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B) An
Intel D2500CCE Atom N2500 Dual LAN Industrial Mini PC
purchased from MitxPC. I added to it a
Crucial m4 64GB
SSD. This PC, with no moving parts, runs a copy of
pfSense. pfSense is a tailored copy of
FreeBSD for use as a firewall and router.
I’m running an IPSec and OpenVPN server on the little box so that we can VPN
from a PC or Mac and our iOS devices from anywhere. pfSense
is reasonably well documented, so it’s pretty easy to get around. While it’s
not as easy as some open source router replacement software (like
TomatoUSB for example), it’s far more
capable and extensible. The community seems great too (although I’ve not had
to directly use it). My only disappointment is that the traffic graph is
lame (compared to others I’ve used):
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C)
Synaccess netBooter. Amazing little device for a reasonable amount of money. The single job of
this device (for us), is to monitor the Internet connection. If the internet
isn’t accessible over a period of 3 minutes (checked by pinging Google’s DNS
servers every 30 seconds), the attached device is rebooted (I have it configured
to turn the DSL modem off for 45 seconds and then restart it). Given our
connection isn’t always reliable and a good kick in the [modem] seems to usually
stabilize the connection, this has been a great addition to our house. The modem
is buried away in the basement in an unfinished area, so this device makes it so
I don’t need to worry about manually rebooting the modem anymore. It keeps a
handy log to show reboot cycles.
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D) There are multiple wireless access points of various makes and models around
the house. I recently bought the
ASUS RT-N16
and updated it to one of the various flavors of the Tomato firmware (a very
recent one designed specifically for this router). Our house is spread
horizontally and over three floors, so we need multiple routers to get
reasonably consistent WiFi coverage. I’ve got an access point on each floor
currently.
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E) UPS –
CyberPower CP850PFCLCD
– it keeps the primary systems of the house alive during a power outage/flicker
event. The server below is connected via USB so that it will automatically shut
down after an extended power failure. I haven’t had any troubles with the device
other than turning off the constant beeping when the power actually goes out for
more than a few seconds. (YES! I know the power is out, thanks for the
[BEEEEEP]).
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F) Two
D-Link 24-port rack mountable Gigabit Switch
DGS-1024D. Seriously, our house is way over-wired. We pulled four CAT-5e cables
to each major room in our house. They all converge on one place in the
unfinished area of our basement to these two switches.
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G)
HP ProLiant N40L Ultra MicroServer: Originally, this was running Windows Home Server 2011. But, just recently, I
made the switch to running Windows 8 Pro. I’ve added a second network card and a
USB 3.0 card (which required a 90 degree right angle molex connector for
power!). I must say that I really like using Windows 8 on this box. It seems
faster than WHS 2011, plus it has the new Storage Pool functionality, plus can
act as a File History destination. File History really is a better file backup
than the backups provided by WHS 2011 anyway.
I had no problems with the install (as this micro server isn’t headless). It
works really well and with the exception of the full image backups from WHS
2011, I’m not missing any functionality.
I’m using
no-ip.com
as a replacement for the Windows Home Server dynamic IP functionality (as
part of a WHS, you were allowed one dynamic IP host name such as
wickedlycoolstuffatmyhouse.homeserver.com). I’d definitely recommend
no-ip.com (they’re free for basic services and cheap for an improved
service). The agent used by no-ip.com can be run as a Windows service and
updates every 5 minutes (so that your IP address, if it changes will be
reflected nearly instantly by no-ip.com. I used the WHS remote file access
feature so few times I won’t miss that (it was so SLOW!). Now, with the VPN
via pfSense, I can remotely wake a PC, and RDP to it directly (or access
file shares). Much better.
I’ve got a number of external HDs that I’ve got set up with scheduled tasks
to back-up the server and other files (and I’m also running Storage Pools
with mirroring).
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H) From
Cable Electronics
(celabs), we have a video/audio distribution unit. I can’t find the model we
have, as it’s 6 years old, but it’s served us so well! While we don’t have as
many inputs as we had a few years ago, it now is sending the Joey video signal
around the house very conveniently. We have this so we only need to buy a single
extra satellite receiver rather than one for each TV.
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I) This is a
Dish Network Joey. It’s
connected to the Russound and to the Audio/Video Distribution device. The remote
control is RF so it works nearly anywhere in the house, and the video/audio is
available on most of our TVs. We don’t really like it (as it’s not easy to use),
but we like the channels …, and love having a DVR. Our setup allows the audio of
the Joey (via the Russound below) to be sent to any room with built in speakers.
In our kitchen, we can listen to TV with the built in room speakers rather than
via the tiny built in speakers on the TV cranked.
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J)
Russound C-Series Multizone Controller
– this sends audio (and remote IR signals) to 6 rooms in our house. We use this
several times a day so we’re really glad we have it. We’ve got it connected to
audio from the Sonos, to the DVR extender, to the XBox, etc. (It has a radio
tuner as well). It’s a simple system and reasonably configurable if you’re handy
with technology (changing labels on the remote keypads for example). We love
having our Sonos hooked up to this device. (It’s also connected to our UPS as a
power fluctuation with this plugged in and physically switched on causes a very
loud audible POP on all of the speakers).
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K)
Sonos Connect. Ah. We love this little guy (in combination with the Russound mentioned
above). Audio everywhere we want it. Our audio. Not old school radio. We’ve got
the Sonos app installed on every iDevice and tablet around the house so we can
control the music anywhere.
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L) Axis 241q (discontinued
apparently). Super stable. Takes up 4 analog video camera feeds and converts
them into IP feeds. So, rather than buying really expensive outdoor security
cameras (they die too frequently!), I can buy reasonably priced security cameras
and replace them without heartache. I’ve got
Blue Iris running on the Windows 8
box and it’s an AMAZING application. I talked about an
older version on my web site 4 years
ago (images are gone though). I just upgraded to version 3 and the product is
just getting better! It chugs through all of the security camera footage and
automatically records (to one of the external USB drives) and sends alert
e-mails as needed when a configurable amount of “movement” is detected at our
house. It’s great getting an image of the UPS guy dropping an Amazon package off
at our house. The Axis devices are expensive, but they’ve been well reviewed,
and I’ve not had any problem with ours.
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M) I wanted to better track our electrical usage, so I hooked up three of the
CT clamps and one
of the
displays from
CurrentCost.net, and then hooked that
up to the Windows 8 micro server (via a touchy COM to USB cable), and it uploads
the data in near real time. Our solar panels mess the data up though … I’ve not
been happy with the setup yet and haven’t had the interest to fix it (or the
electrician).
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N)
roku. We bought an extra power adapter so we can carry this from room to room as we
didn’t want to buy multiples of these (as we’d only ever use one at a time as
our Internet bandwidth can’t really handle anything better).
While we have an AppleTV, we love our Roku more. (Partly as we just haven’t
decided to spend money on iTunes if Amazon has the same products). It’s not
perfect, but it’s not expensive and it plays Amazon content more
consistently than our “Internet enabled” Samsung TV.
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O)
Nest. I’ve talked about Nest a
few times. <giggle>
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P) XBox. We’ve got 2 of these. One connected to the main family room TV (for
game playing), and a second to a small TV in our kitchen (for Media Center
functionality).
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Q) A Puget Systems Echo. A
very small efficient PC that we use as a Windows Media Center. It’s directly
connected to a Samsung LCD TV via HDMI. As the PC is too small to have a decent
dual TV tuner, I’ve got a
SiliconDust HDHome Run Dual Digital TV
tuner tucked away in the unfinished basement area. It’s a great combination. The
Echo is also setup to serve the Media Center experience to a second XBox in our
kitchen. We currently use the Media Center to record local HD over-the-air
broadcasts. Dish Network (our current satellite TV provider) doesn’t offer all
of our local TV stations via HD. I’ve got an
Antennas Direct ClearStream4
on our roof – best antenna we’ve ever owned. It’s connected to the HDHome
Run tuner. The Media Center is set to go into Standby when not used, so it’s
energy efficient (certainly better than the satellite/cable provider’s DVRs that
are energy hogs). (And while Satellite reception can be affected by weather,
this combination always seems to get a decent signal so we can get news in the
case of severe weather).
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R) Dish Network Hopper –
our internet connection isn’t always reliable enough to maintain HD streamed
video content. (SD is always fine). We experimented with “cut the cable”, but
after doing the math of what we wanted to watch, and the way we watch TV (almost
always recorded, rarely live), the math worked out to be within $5 of the cost
of satellite TV service a month. So, given that we’d get a lot more options with
satellite TV, we stayed with that. (We don’t have cable TV as an option at our
house). The Hopper is “meh.” It’s got more usability issues than I’d like, but
it’s generally OK.
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S) We installed 24 solar panels in late 2011. The solar panels use
micro inverters from
enphase energy
(model M210-84-240). Each inverter sends its status via the power-line to a
small device called the Envoy.
We’ve not been real happy with the setup as it’s very touchy. Sending signals
over the power-lines can be a sketchy and inconsistent affair. When originally
installed, we struggled to find a reasonable location within the house that had
a strong signal from the micro inverters. Eventually we found a location.
We’ve had one micro inverter fail and was replaced.
The Envoy also needs wired internet access so that it can update a
public/private web page with the latest data from the solar panels. It’s
actually quite slick. Thankfully, there is no subscription service. (For the
geeks, there is reasonable local access to the data through the device as
well if you wanted to get direct access to the data without going through
enphase and their “Enlighten” portal) The Envoy is powered by apparently a
CPU slightly more powerful than a toaster. The thing takes minutes to boot.
It’s really only frustrating when you’re trying to find a final resting spot
for the device.
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T) 24 solar panels –
SunPower 230-watt
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U) We’ve got several wireless security cameras scattered about internally. Using
Blue Iris (mentioned above), they only record/watch during hours that we’re
typically away. I talked more about the cameras
here. They both were Asante most
recently.
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V) We’ve gone through so many wired security cameras over the years, I’ve lost
track and am not really sure what we have actively installed anymore. Several of
the cameras are color. I always buy color these days as the price difference
isn’t substantial. What I have noticed is that you should always have a backup
power supply ready. It’s the thing that typically goes on these camera setups
first (and if you start seeing “wavy lines”, replace the power supply as it’s
almost always been the culprit in my experience). Most of them all use the same
type of power supply, so I now have a few backups. I buy all of the various
supplies from
Monoprice.
We have two cameras that have night time IR capabilities. Ignore what they
say on the packaging for “night vision” distances. They’re always wrong.
Further, the “vision” is so weak at the far end of the distance to be
absolutely useless. Practically speaking, I’d take the distance they suggest
and at least cut it in half. Also, make sure you consider the distance from
the mount to the ground in your calculations. While I like the idea of IR,
it works so poorly on our cameras that I couldn’t recommend any specific
reasonably priced model. If you’re expecting to be able identify someone
using the IR, good luck. You might be able to tell the difference from a
human or a sasquatch, on a good night.
And that represents the majority of things we’ve got setup in our house right now.
I’ve tried to include links to the original product page or where I bought a given
product if available (or to a newer model if the older one has been discontinued).
I’m so embarrassed by the state of the wiring and setup of the majority of the
equipment mentioned above that I’m not going to include a photo. It looks like a
child’s messy toy chest, filled with wires and various rectangular boxes with
blinking lights.