I feel like me ordering a half dozen of these to control lights and sprinklers or random network pi-holes is
the equivalent of the toast buttering robot on rick and morty. poor things will never live to their potential, but here we are.
I repurposed an old gaming PC as a Proxmox server, stuck HA on a VM and have never looked back. Backups are easier, it’s blazing fast, I can have 90 days of history if I feel to, upgrades/reboots take seconds instead of minutes.
Don’t get me wrong, I love my Pis and use them for my 3D printers and such, but Home Assistant is a lot for a Pi to manage well at times.
Having said that… I too am curious about the performance bump here especially considering the SD card write speed increase and the PCI-E (SSD) capability. I’m sure it’ll still kill SD cards every 6 months with HA running on it though.
I'm running HA on an esxi VM on a gen10 proliant server for the same reasons.
I made the joke because the max spec pi 4 is just reaching breaking point based on testing a recent upgrade on a HA instance I previously had on there.
If the pi 5 copes better that still opens HA up for a generation of new home automators without having to invest a lot of cash or maintain software and hardware for a non-SBC.
I hope this trend doesn't continue with HA though; it's getting very resource heavy. It's my second most resource intensive VM after a windows VM which says a lot....
But, will we be able to buy them when we need them? I sure hope so. There have been a few moments I really needed one and couldn't get one at less than 150% markup. I am down to one RP4b
Can it decode x265 as my pi4 media player struggles with that and only plays the audio stream? So x264 is my current preferred format but comes in at much bigger file sizes.
I'm on a esxi VM on a gen10 proliant server for the same reasons.
I made the joke because the max spec pi 4 is just reaching breaking point based on testing an instance I previously had on there.
If the pi 5 copes better that still opens HA up for a generation of new home automators without having to invest a lot or maintain software and hardware for a non-SBC.
I hope this trend doesn't continue with HA though... it's getting very resource heavy. It's my second most resource intensive VM after windows VMs which says a lot....