- Is there some trick to getting this installed? My HAOS instance (x64 generic) has no updates pending despite refreshing by clicking “Check for updates” in the android app… - I’m not seeing it either (yet), and I’m on Haas-os. - Edit: nevermind, manually checking for the update in settings/system/updates made it show up - I actually had to force it via the CLI. - ha core update- That didn’t work either, I had to manually specify the version: - ha core update --version 2025.7.0
 
- @HiTekRedNek @thehatfox My instance found the update 3 hours ago. 
 
- The voice focus is fucking el-el-lame - Removing dependency on using cloud voice like Google or Amazon is awesome. I wouldn’t use voice if that’s how I had to do it, and I really like voice control for my HA ecosystem. - To me it’s very gimmicky and requires a lot of work. It probably fits English speakers better as I’ve not had any luck using local voice. - You do need a bit of horsepower to run Whisper locally. A Nabu Casa subscription gets you their voice processing, and it’s quick. Granted, it’s not local but I trust them a pile more than I trust either of the other two, and if I had to I’d buy a GPU and run it locally, that’s their focus anyway. 
 
 
- Agree. I do not speak to the machine. It does not speak to me. It is a happy arrangement. - I can see the use as an accessibility aid, but nothing more. - All I have ever wanted from a machine is to be able to say, “I’m busy right now, but I’ve had a thought; here - hold this for me”… - …without it telling anyone me and my partner’s batting average. 
- I use it to do things at the same time as other things. I can add something to the shopping list when I’m cooking or turn on the fan when I’m getting ready for bed without stopping what I’m doing to click buttons. I find that it’s really good for things that can’t easily be automated but you also can’t (or don’t want to) put on a physical button. - I actually use Alexa as I haven’t had time to investigate HA voice control but the principle is the same. - No Alexa here for more reasons than just being a voice assistant. - None of them would particularly useful to me even if I didn’t hate them, due to a lot of hearing loss. Real voices are hard enough and the ones from a speaker are worse. Anything from a PA system is unintelligible. - Most things we have automated with sensors, schedules and buttons. Not much else to be done that can’t be done with a few seconds of infrequent manual input, or shortcut software button on device. - I think I’m dead set on this. It’s nice to see others getting along, but I’ll never want it. 
 
 
- I guess they have watched a lot of Ironman and want to recreate Jarvis at some point 
 





