![]() But it isn’t because ForeverSave will prompt you with a small pop-up and jiggling the window quickly to alert you to just save your document. That sounds like a deal breaker, because it would defeat the purpose of not having to remember to save your document. It even contains information on how much size is being taken up by all your back-ups, which can be helpful if you accidentally did save thirty versions of your 100 MB Photoshop document.įoreverSave isn’t quite as magic as Word in the way it auto-saves your documents, you will have to save your document manually before it can auto-save. The bottom bar is also important, containing a search box, view options and options to restore a version or copy versions to the relevant folder. Then the below that is where all the versions of the document are kept. You’ll notice that the top third of this area contains a horizontal list of documents these are all the documents that have been saved. The left sidebar ‘Library’ lists all the applications that you have chosen to auto-save, whilst to the right are all the documents saved by the document. It is simple and pleasant, nothing is overdone and yet it still has all the controls you could possibly need. But that might be a problme with the stream or my configuration.You (hopefully) won’t need to look at ForeverSave that often but that hasn’t meant the developers have ignored the UI design. The other times it shows the station name and the currently played song for a few seconds, without playing any music, and then the player stops again. I also managed to play a stream from an internet radio but most of the times I need to select the source multiple times until it finaly manages to play. Playing a TTS notification was quite easy. I am stil playing around with the Home Assistant integration but I have no experience with media players in HA so I am still struggeling a bit with that part. With a Lan connection this step is probably not needed but I did not test it.Īll the borads in the network can then be grouped and ungrouped over the app and you can select the music for each of the boards or groups. ![]() The setup is pretty easy: You can download the 4Stream app which allows you to set the W-Lan accesspoint of the devices over bluetooth. I recently ordered 5 Arylic Up2Stream v4 Amplifier borads and they are working quite good. They are using Linkplay and there is a Home Assistant integration for it. They offer so called DIY boards which are basically amplifier boards without a case and they can therefor be used for DIY projects. I wrote some stuff to allow for full-range adjustment of the Yamaha receivers since the built-in media_player in HA is incapable of adjusting them above 0dB.įirst I was also thinking about using Raspberries with HiFiBerry or similar AMPs and LMS.Ī while ago I’ve seen the Amps from Arylic, which looked very promissing. If you decide to go Yamaha, look in the Projects section. Long term, I will be adding more receivers to get a 1:1 match of channels/zones to speaker pairs, but it wasn’t in the budget when the install was done. These allow for impedance matching, and also allow you to have music playing in only some rooms. Presently, I drive multiple speaker pairs from one zone by using the OSB in-wall volume knobs. All are Klipsch, Reference series where possible. Depending on the location, I either have speakers in the ceiling, or bookshelf speakers, or outdoor speakers. I went this route since I prefer better speakers than Sonos/Alexa/Google provide. Multi-zone, can handle streaming from any of the sources you mention, good integration with HA, and I stream Plex to them using Chromecasts. I have multiple Yamaha receivers, the newest being a RX-V6A.
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