Hiha.tpham , thanks for that, my bad. Now I am successfully able to activate the TestCloud license from my pipeline. However there is the following error later on which seems still related to the organization ID. What is that issue?
Hi @irelandjj, this error is caused by no access permission to the project that you inputted. Please open Settings > Platform Integration and recheck the project that you selected whether you have access permission to it or not.
Activating with a product key: If you are activating with a product key, delete any existing text in the Enter product key field. Copy your product key (from the location that you saved it to from the Find Your Product Key procedure) and paste it into the text box, then click Activate.
If Tableau can't connect to the site that authenticates that product key, it can't complete the activation and you must activate the product offline. Follow the instructions in Activate your product offline to complete the activation process.
If you're installing the product on a computer that doesn't have internet access, or if your company firewall or proxy restricts access to the
licensing.tableau.com site, then you must complete the steps below to finish activating your product. You will need access to another computer that has internet access to complete all the steps in this procedure.
If you're upgrading versions and you've paid your maintenance since the last time offline activation was completed (Tableau Desktop only), contact Tableau Customer Service(Link opens in a new window) via email to get an updated product key before continuing with offline activation.
Launch Tableau Prep Builder. You will be prompted to complete the registration process form to register the product. If you have previously registered a Tableau product, the fields may be populated automatically.
I have that strange issue where motions sensors activate for no particular reason. I have scene where 3 motion seniors were activating 5 different lights. All was working without any problems for last two years, but for some time light is randomly turning on without any movement in that area. I checked the logs and the sensor activates and deactivates constantly so the light turns on just after it turns off. Sometimes there are no issues for a few hours and when it starts then it's constantly turning on and off. The motion sensor which causes this is random.
I'd also want to be sure it is device events you are referring to in the logs. Open the device page and click on the Event button at the top to check it is actually the motion sensor that is moving between the activated and inactive states. Just to rule out any issues with apps having some kind of delayed response.
Definitely no ghosts, but these false triggerings make the usage of the Hubitat Safety Monitor very problematic...
Replace the battery with a new one at one of the Neo Coolcam motion sensors and monitor it the false triggering will stop or not.
If the Z-wave driver allows configuration of the sensor sensitivity, you can also try reducing it if possible.
I've mitigated the problem of false motion when I'm away by using Zone Motion Controller to have 2 sensors that must activate in a set time window for the zone to go active. I then use these zones in HSM to stop the house thinking we have intruders.
Just something to consider.
Many sensors are powered by lithium batteries. The battery voltage on these batteries stays close to maximum until the battery is close to EOL. Then the voltage plummets, The device drivers predict battery life by measuring battery voltage. Thus, by the time you get to 30% life remaining, you might not have much life left. However, I have some devices that continue to work with only 1% battery life remaining. It all depends upon the specific device and its driver.
Great advice. I should add because of what you said about the battery, I don't know of any of these lithium run devices use and voltage regulation. They just straight off the battery since it's stable until it's not.
For my smartthings sensors I have, I find 50% and up is fine. After they drop below 50% then it becomes hit and miss if the sensor will even call home. I use the Hubitat notification app to send me a notification when a sensor drops below 50%. I do end to changing some batteries prematurely, but it stops the "ghosts" or just non-working for me,
If you want to squeeze that last little bit out of the batteries you could try using the device watchdog app by @bptworld, using activity from the device as an indicator for it still working, or not. There are some caveats and nuances to using these indicators, nothing to do with the way Bryan has developed the app, just the way the various elements operate, but the watchdog app provides an easy to use way of tapping into these metrics.
For the motion stuff, Hubitat has schooled the family so far that if they don't trigger motion, everyone sits in the dark. Just not acceptable, hence why I'm ok with swapping batteries! I do buy the cheapest ones off Amazon, and even at 50%, I get 6-18 months, depending on sensor activity.
To be honest, I've had a lot of my hue motion sensors for nearly 3-4 years and I can't remember replacing any batteries. Admittedly the cost of the bridge and the sensors themselves may outweigh the battery replacement charge... but even just for convenience and reliability...
You do not need a Hue bridge to use Hue motion sensors. In fact, it is best not to pair them with the bridge, even if you have one. The sensors are Zigbee 3.0, so they pair quite nicely with Hubitat directly. If your use them withy the Hue bridge, they can only be used to control Hue lighting. If you pair them with Hubitat, you can use them for lots of different things.
I have several Hue motion sensors. Most are older versions, but the most recent is the new generation. They are all paired directly with Hubitat and control things other than Hue lighting. I do have a Hue bridge, but it only controls Hue lights.
The community developed advanced hue integration and I believe coco hue can receive push notifications from sensors such as these when they are connected to the hue bridge, which is what I have been doing.
Organization-linked: Organization-linked Activation Lock requires Apple School Manager, Apple Business Manager, or Apple Business Essentials and is generally simpler to manage for organizations. It allows an MDM solution to fully control turning Activation Lock on and off through server-side interactions.
User-linked: User-linked Activation Lock requires the user to have a personal Apple ID (not a Managed Apple ID) and for them to turn on Find My. This method allows the user to lock an organization-linked device to their personal Apple ID if the MDM solution has allowed Activation Lock.
Allowing organization-linked Activation Lock means the MDM solution (not the user) contacts Apple servers directly to lock or unlock the device. Since this is done entirely server-side, there are no dependencies on user actions or the state of their device. The MDM solution creates its own bypass code, and sends it to Apple servers when it needs to turn on or turn off Activation Lock for the device.
Suppose that your MDM solution is unsuccessful in removing Activation Lock. Then on the Activation Lock Screen, enter the user name and password of the account that created the MDM server token that links the MDM solution to Apple School Manager, Apple Business Manager, or Apple Business Essentials. This is an account with the role of Administrator, Site Manager (Apple School Manager only), or Device Enrollment Manager.
To clear the Activation Lock on Apple devices that support dual SIMs, the MDM solution must include both IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) values in the request. For MDM vendors, see Creating and Using Bypass Codes on the Apple Developer website.
This article provides step-by-step instructions on how to activate Office for Mac. If you're running into errors or issues with installing or activating Office on your Mac, see What to try if you can't install or activate Office for Mac instead.
For Microsoft 365 for Mac, you can have up to 25 licenses associated with the same Microsoft account: only one license for a Microsoft 365 subscription and multiple one-time-use installs of Microsoft 365 for Mac Home and Student or Home and Business.
If you try to activate a one-time install of Microsoft 365 for Mac and you get the error: Key already used, you will need to select another license to use. Click Cancel and you'll return to the license selection screen.
Step 2: Sign in with your Microsoft account, or create one if you don't have one (you can create one with any existing email address you already have). Be sure to remember this account so that you can install or reinstall Office later, without a product key.
I am currently stumped with my current research lab experimental setup. A hand-drawn wiring schematic will be attached below, as well as, a picture of the physical wiring (not a great picture so I drew a diagram). Also, in the physical wiring picture I have the signal pin for the relay attached to pin 8 but the code shows pin 13. This is an old photo as I was trying to change the pin for troubleshooting purposes. In real life it is connected to pin 13.
Everything else seems to work fine. Meaning: the serial monitor displays "0" when the button is not pressed and displays "1" when the button is pressed, the TTL trigger activates a high-speed camera upon pressing the button (starts recording).
It looks like your code would not compile. The last part of the code is not inside loop. The number of brackets are always the same for open and closing. Try the Tools-> Auto Format function in the Arduino IDE to automatically format your code.
Okay so I am back in lab now to check it out. I might have copied my code wrong when I emailed it to myself because that bracket was not there.
My code now is as follows, and I'm still having the same issue
3a8082e126