Enbrighten Z-Wave Smart Rocker Light Switch, 3-Way Ready, Funziona con Alexa, Google Assistant, Hub ZWave richiesto, Ripetitore/Range Extender, White & Light Almond, 46201 + 1 interruttore a bilanciere aggiuntivo 46199

Brand:Enbrighten

3.7/5

75.95

PACCHETTO ALL-IN-ONE – Tutto il necessario per trasformare un tradizionale interruttore a 3 vie in uno smart switch è incluso nel kit. Lo switch aggiuntivo con marchio Enbrighten consente allo switch Z-Wave Smart Switch con marchio Enbrighten di funzionare correttamente in installazioni multi-switch e rispecchia la funzionalità dello switch primario. RICHIEDE UN GATEWAY CERTIFICATO Z-WAVE - Compatibile con i seguenti hub certificati Z-Wave: SmartThings, Wink, ADT Pulse, Trane, Vivint, Nexia, Honeywell, HomeSeer, Harmony Home Hub Extender, Vera e Connect. Funziona con Alexa per il controllo vocale (hub richiesto; dispositivo Alexa e hub venduti separatamente). FACILE INSTALLAZIONE CON UN CAVO SEMPLICE - I terminali di rilevamento automatico del carico di linea sull'interruttore supportano un'installazione rapida e semplice rilevando i cavi di linea e di carico e configurando l'interruttore di conseguenza. Le doppie porte di messa a terra, che sono sfalsate per evitare le viti di montaggio del quadro elettrico, supportano il collegamento a margherita nelle configurazioni multi-switch. DESIGN DELL'ALLOGGIAMENTO SALVASPAZIO - I componenti migliorati hanno ridotto la profondità dell'alloggiamento fino al 20 percento rispetto ai precedenti modelli Z-Wave ed hanno eliminato la necessità di schede riscaldanti. I miglioramenti Quick Fit sono la soluzione intelligente ideale per scatole di commutazione vecchio stile, configurazioni multi-gang o qualsiasi altra applicazione con spazio limitato. COMPATIBILE CON ALEXA – RICHIEDE UN HUB SUPPORTATO DA ALEXA per il controllo vocale con i prodotti Echo (dispositivo Alexa e hub venduti separatamente). NON PUÒ connettersi direttamente con ECHO PLUS (solo i prodotti Zigbee possono connettersi direttamente a Echo Plus). Controlla in modalità wireless le funzioni ON/OFF dell'illuminazione ambientale con il tuo dispositivo mobile o computer utilizzando qualsiasi gateway certificato Z-Wave. Tensione supportata - 120 V CA. Portata wireless: fino a 150 piedi.

PACCHETTO ALL-IN-ONE – Tutto il necessario per trasformare un tradizionale interruttore a 3 vie in uno smart switch è incluso nel kit. Lo switch aggiuntivo con marchio Enbrighten consente allo switch Z-Wave Smart Switch con marchio Enbrighten di funzionare correttamente in installazioni multi-switch e rispecchia la funzionalità dello switch primario. RICHIEDE UN GATEWAY CERTIFICATO Z-WAVE - Compatibile con i seguenti hub certificati Z-Wave: SmartThings, Wink, ADT Pulse, Trane, Vivint, Nexia, Honeywell, HomeSeer, Harmony Home Hub Extender, Vera e Connect. Funziona con Alexa per il controllo vocale (hub richiesto; dispositivo Alexa e hub venduti separatamente). FACILE INSTALLAZIONE CON UN CAVO SEMPLICE - I terminali di rilevamento automatico del carico di linea sull'interruttore supportano un'installazione rapida e semplice rilevando i cavi di linea e di carico e configurando l'interruttore di conseguenza. Le doppie porte di messa a terra, che sono sfalsate per evitare le viti di montaggio del quadro elettrico, supportano il collegamento a margherita nelle configurazioni multi-switch. DESIGN DELL'ALLOGGIAMENTO SALVASPAZIO - I componenti migliorati hanno ridotto la profondità dell'alloggiamento fino al 20 percento rispetto ai precedenti modelli Z-Wave ed hanno eliminato la necessità di schede riscaldanti. I miglioramenti Quick Fit sono la soluzione intelligente ideale per scatole di commutazione vecchio stile, configurazioni multi-gang o qualsiasi altra applicazione con spazio limitato. COMPATIBILE CON ALEXA – RICHIEDE UN HUB SUPPORTATO DA ALEXA per il controllo vocale con i prodotti Echo (dispositivo Alexa e hub venduti separatamente). NON PUÒ connettersi direttamente con ECHO PLUS (solo i prodotti Zigbee possono connettersi direttamente a Echo Plus). Controlla in modalità wireless le funzioni ON/OFF dell'illuminazione ambientale con il tuo dispositivo mobile o computer utilizzando qualsiasi gateway certificato Z-Wave. Tensione supportata - 120 V CA. Portata wireless: fino a 150 piedi.
Brand Enbrighten
Circuit Type 3-way
Connector Type Wireless
Item Dimensions LxWxH 1.13 x 1.75 x 4.13 inches
Material Plastic, Metal
Mounting Type Wall Mount
Operating Voltage 120 Volts
Operation Mode ON-OFF-ON
Switch Style Rocker
Terminal Spdt

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Scritto da: Pseudo D
contains multitudes
The Yale history prof Beverly Gage has written a new biography of FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. It is her first biography, according to the review by Kai Bird, and took thirteen years to write. This is a massive work of almost 750 pages, plus notes. It reminded me of the feeling of achievement after completing the Brothers Karamazov, where I felt like I could take a break for a while. The length of the book is absolutely necessary because of the duration of Hoover's career. As the title indicates, he was intricately connected to all the major figures in American government from the 1920s to the early 1970s, including eight presidents, evenly divided by party. Gage goes right to the beginning with his youth in Washington, D.C., which he never left except for college in the South. She puts a lot of emphasis on his Southern fraternity. The post-WWI era was marked by the rise of communism and anarchists such as Emma Goldman. While the narrative is thorough, Gage ironically has little on Herbert Hoover, the President who shared JEH's name. It then goes into FDR and the New Deal. This is important for a number of reasons. Hoover was the embodiment of what we might call big government, what Jim Burnham called the managerial state. While certainly conservative, he thrived with administrations of both parties and even major differences in political philosophy. He was far more skilled than people think, not just by sly tactics but the ordinary means of persuasion and communication. Despite this, JEH is viewed today as a partisan figure. Before we get to that, there is also a lot of psychoanalyzing of his sexuality. Gage goes with the contemporary interpretation of his relationships, but in a more nuanced, less labeling fashion. I see no reason to question Hoover's commitment to the values of western civilization, of which he viewed himself as a grateful participant. This would include a communitarian view of American society. Both freedom and order are necessary, but order and stability is part of that. So while Hoover was part of big government or the administrative state, he was old enough that he was able to apply traditional values to it. This is very different from the temptation of today's deep state to be anti-Trump. Today he is viewed as a partisan figure and specifically as a villain to the left, something of a Joe McCarthy. This is absurd, because while McCarthy burned out in a few years, Hoover thrived politically and in terms of public relations with high approval ratings. He had differences with the Kennedys, but still worked with them and then thrived under LBJ and Nixon. With regard to anticommunism, I can see his influence on Bishop Fulton Sheen, as well as on the issue of crime. Sheen was a philosopher and saw more complexity, but the rhetoric does reflect that interaction. Gage doesn't really seem to understand the extent of communist infiltration. Even when trying to be neutral about Hiss and Chambers, she seems skeptical even with the evidence that Chambers provided. She relies more on Sam Tanenhaus to interpret Chambers. The most controversial thing about Hoover is probably his dealings with Martin Luther King. This was referenced as recently as in Dave Chappelle's SNL monologue after the midterm elections. Here I thought Gage was quite fair. MLK did great things, and also had some serious errors of judgment regarding the communist associates. By the early 70s, with the new issues such as the counterculture, Hoover was viewed in the partisan way that he is today by the left, with Senators Ted Kennedy, McGovern, Muskie and Church. On the other side, Gage points out Reagan, WFB, Goldwater, Thurmond, Kilpatrick and Schlafly. Pat Buchanan, for his part, was typically astute and recommended that Nixon make him retire before the left got him, but it wasn't possible. After his death, there was more typical bipartisanship in remembering Hoover's legacy, but then it deteriorated. Besides the social unrest of the late 60s and early 70s, as Ross Douthat has shown, something happened to America and the left around 2014, so the villain view prevails. While the author shares much of it, hopefully this work will help some people to see other sides of the stories.
Scritto da: MT57
A sympathetic biography of Hoover as an exceptional bureaucrat.
This book is well researched and lengthy. I am sure it is the product of many years of work. It paints a cohesive portrait of Hoover as one of the first "progressive" bureaucrats, in the original sense of that word in US history, where it meant scientific and pragmatic. The author emphasizes this bureaucratic side over the autocratic side, which came to dominate the public perception of him over the past 50 years. In her telling, Hoover was consistently DISinclined from temperament, conservatism, and legal training to expand the FBI's activities, but was led to do so by more political and / or adamant superiors, particularly FDR ( a new insight for me), until, finally, in his last years, out of disgust with the rise of the counterculture, he went over completely and without reservation to the dark side. The book devotes roughly 150 pages to Hoover's upbringing and family history and college years. This I gather was an under-examined portion of his life. She makes much of his membership in a overtly pro-Southern fraternity in his college years, and reveals that the fraternity was a significant source of hires in the early days of the FBI. The book also covers his presumably homosexual relationships with two men, first Melvin Purvis, which was more emotionally extravagant, and then Clyde Tolson, his lifelong companion. While what the book contains is certainly thorough and well-considered, the book strangely omits mention of virtually all of the more sensational points made in Anthony Summers' book about 30 years ago, which first surfaced to the general public the nature of Hoover's private life. Her notes on sources show that she read that book, met with the author, had access to his source materials, but almost entirely ignores that book. Only one anecdote, summarized and dismissed in two paragraphs, makes its way into this book. She does not refute anything else in that book. She just ignores it. And I am not referring merely to Summers' work on Hoover's private life but to his assertions that the mob blackmailed Hoover regarding his sexuality and bribed him with tips on fixed races. None of that is mentioned in the slightest, despite the near-encyclopedic nature of the rest of her research. Nor, in her chapters on WWII, does she take up the propositions that Hoover met personally with Frank Costello to work out a modus vivendi with the mob regarding operation of the docks in NYC during the war. So, while what is in the book undoubtedly deserves 5 stars, I have to downgrade my review to reflect these considerable omissions. I will not speculate on why the author ducked these more controversial questions regarding her subject.
Scritto da: Dogmom4ever
Brilliant Book - Now a Pulitzer Prize Winner - but font size is too small
This is a brilliant book - but I bought it twice - once in print and then again, because the font size was so small, I bought it on Kindle. A very nuanced portrait of Hoover that is as much a biography as a history of the United States in the 20th century. Very well written and absorbing.
Scritto da: Guy
deep thoughts about history
Gage gives much thought to such an incredibly well researched book. Hoover was very complicated and deserves credit as well as criticism which is well documented. A great a US history is part of the Hoover storylines Well worth reading and thinking about.
Scritto da: Brendan E. Fox
Typos and more typos
A great book, but I’ve never seen more typos in my life. Perhaps this is only the case with the Kindle version.
Scritto da: mj
A surprisingly interesting biography of a surprisingly interesting man...
I've long enjoyed political and historical biographies, and this is one of the best I've ever read. In the title of this review I say "surprisingly interesting man" -- in a way that's an odd statement, because Hoover was a top national figure for decades during a tumultuous stretch of our history, so how could he *not* be interesting? But often the image of Hoover was one-dimensional: when I was in grade school in the 1950s he was What Every Young American Should Aspire to Be; by the time I was a college student in the late 1960s he was an evil hypocrite and cynic, full stop. Gage shows that there is much more to the story: for much of his career he was simultaneously a government modernizer and innovator, an unreconstructed bigot, and a conservative (later, right-wing) ideological warrior. Her research is meticulous and her analysis, rigorously fair-minded. In all it is a terrific accomplishment -- yes, it's a long, long book but there is an immense amount to say about a man who shaped, and was shaped by, the emergence of our modern systems of governance.

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