“In my case and for testing, I have the Hub in an open area where I can early watch it. The light is bright enough that it gets my attention when it changes and I can immediately investigate to see why it changed.”
It’s a power light. Your power goes on and off that often?
Doh, I know what the light does, just my sarcasm that failed. The point is that on the latest version the darned thing lights up half the room now…up till a few days ago it was perfect.
Now the suggestions are to stick tape on it it - Cute! Or find a location where I can stick it in the cupboard whilst somehow maintaining the range to reach the outdoor unit.
Didn’t somebody say if it ain’t broke then don’t fix it? Well yup, was just perfect until the latest “upgrade”.
Don’t see any poll link, but I’m not much of a fan of the forums interface here FWIW.
Anyway, my Ubiquiti AC Lite access point has a similarly bright led ring on it. That software has an option to turn the LED off in its configuration. Default is on. Seems like a reasonable thing to ask for here
(can’t speculate how bright you’re describing the LED as being, as I’m in the backlog for getting ‘any’ hardware.)
Personally, I think a power light is a basic must for the hub. I don’t really have an opinion on whether a blue LED makes for a better power light than a green LED, so perhaps if the resistor value for the blue LED in the hub is correct, blue could be the “wifi connected, power on” status color, and green could be the “BLE connected, power on” color. But I’m inclined to say that one status light scheme change per hardware version is enough…
I like this idea. And indeed, it’s relatively simple. Although @GaryFunk’s poll shows the “always on” option winning, there’s no reason we can’t have our cake and eat it too. I’ve added “hub LED ‘off’ option” to our roadmap.
Thank you! Those of us with early hardware that now have a green living room at night will be grateful.
Joking aside, there is a general issue with IoT and connected homes where (like many others) I have several hubs/bridges for a variety of devices and they all have LED lights which end up looking like we have year-round Christmas lights. Option to turn off indicator lights will inevitably become the market standard (Unless SmartThings or someone else becomes the big gorilla, but that’s a different discussion).
I agree this is a widespread issue, and not just in IoT but in the home electronic gadgetry space in general. Thank you for pushing on it. We wrestled with this from the start, and the solution seems obvious now!
Never mind the christmas tree LEDs - I wish they all used a standard size enclosure so I could stack all these various hubs and doo-dahs. I get the desire to stand out from the crowd, but it makes for one hell of a mess! Anyway, I am drifting off-topic, sorry