Some devices get confused if there is only one DNS server provided by the DHCP… Maybe try setting your PiHole IP for both “Primary” and “Alternative” DNS server
Some devices get confused if there is only one DNS server provided by the DHCP… Maybe try setting your PiHole IP for both “Primary” and “Alternative” DNS server
The DHCP server pushes the DNS configuration to the clients. Is your Asus router running the DHCP server? If so, in DHCP configuration, set the DNS to point to your Pi-Hole
So can you explain to me in simple terms how the Doorbell, go2rtc, Frigate and HA are operating together? So I could at least know in what direction I should try and make them work together
Thanks for the suggestion, but still feels like a vague suggestion… will it work when there’s only Android devices available? How do I add a camera to it when I don’t have the HomeKit code to add the camera? I have no clue what to do
The only thing that comes to mind which would be our fault is a suboptimal internet connection when it comes to the Outlook not starting properly each time… but still not an excuse for it to get stuck in a background so we need a hacky solution like that shortcut I’ve made…
I will give that combo a shot for a couple of coworkers and see how they will react after a while. I’ve used K-9 2 years ago and it seemed fine, though my company also purchased us Nine Mail and was quite decent. Any thoughts/experiences?
Jellyfin has it’s own plugins, but I had no interest in adding other services into Kodi. If you need those, better buy a popular Android device which are licensed for use with DRM services and you’re done with it. Even Jellyfin has a good Android app but it’s slow in development aspect and needs a lot of work to support all media types.
Yeah, I immediately thought of that too, but that’s a relationship of an aunt and her nephew
OpenDNS, anyone?
LibreOffice Draw does nice editing as well, I’ve just learned that recently
And PDF Arranger is very simple for rearranging, rotating, inserting, removing and rotating pages
Then I’d recommend turning off the DHCP server on the Asus router and enabling it on the PiHole… inside the PiHole DHCP server configuration set your routers IP as a gateway address, and set the PiHole address as the DNS. This way, PiHole will manage the IP addresses in your network, which might be a better option overall.
I’m an advanced Mikrotik user overall, one thing they had not been great about is WiFi but their networking capabilities have always been amazing but had a steep learning curve if you’d be using their more advanced options. Though Mikrotik has finally released their WiFi6 devices whose WiFi is finally getting competitive with other WiFi router manufacturers. I can recommend hAP AX2 or hAP AX3, and definitely check their Youtube channel for getting their tutorials.
Mikrotik is definitely my go-to recommendation if you also want to learn networking fundamentals because it’s affordable and yet incredibly advanced whichever model you get because they all have pretty much the same RouterOS software within them. There’s even more things to thinker about ever since the release of their RouterOS 7 which is now based on Linux 5 kernels compared to their old RouterOS 6 which was based on Linux 3 kernels.
You can even run PiHole on the Mikrotik router itself