michaelharley

joined 3 months ago
85
submitted 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) by michaelharley@infosec.pub to c/cat@lemmy.world
 

Hi hello. Happy #Caturday! I would like to introduce you to our little weirdo, Lennie.

A white cat with green eyes wearing a yellow collar with a bell sits on a gray wood-look floor in front of a gray couch. The cat is looking directly at the camera with an alert expression.

Look at this little dummy! What a sweetie. (Richmond, VA)

Lennie is the newest member of The Goblin Hoard. He was born 06/28/2025 and his gotcha date was 10/04/2025. We don't exactly know his breed, but he looks like a lynx point Siamese to us. We named him after Lennie from the John Steinbeck novel Of Mice and Men. If you've read it, you know Lennie was big, sweet, and not the sharpest. We took one look at our derpy little buddy and knew it fit.

He's very best buds with Linus and they're always hanging out and getting into shenanigans together. They play and play and play together. They hang out on the back porch, keeping watch over the backyard. He even interacts with grumpy pants Lily.

It took him the longest of any of our cats to learn how to use the cat door. He'd sit and watch the others use it, then he'd approach and inspect it. He did that for weeks and weeks before actually doing it. Even to this day, he still kind of tumbles through it as if he's surprised it worked.

Some of our kitties are snugglers like Linus, Mac and Polly, while others are more aloof, and Lennie falls squarely in the aloof camp. He likes to be around us, or at least in the same room, and he'll allow us to give him some pets, but pets are not his favorite thing. He especially doesn't want his head petted or his face touched.

He's pretty timid around new people or strange, loud noises. If the garbage truck is coming down the alley, he books it inside and heads straight upstairs. If we have guests over, he makes himself quite scarce. Oddly enough, he's not timid around strange cats. There's a neighborhood cat that comes around who is somewhat aggressive, but Lennie wants to be his friend. It's quite odd considering how he is about everything else!

We quite love Lennie. Please enjoy these photos of our little weirdo.

A gray cat rests on a light-colored armchair in a modern living room with large windows overlooking green foliage. An orange owl-shaped lamp sits on a side table, and a green blanket drapes over the chair.

A gray tabby cat wearing a blue collar lounges on a gray upholstered armchair near a window, gazing outside at greenery and bare tree branches visible through the glass.

A tabby and white cat lies contentedly on a burgundy blanket surrounded by pink and beige quilted blankets on a gray striped couch, appearing relaxed and comfortable.

Two cats lounging on a brown couch, with a cream-colored cat stretching in the foreground and a black and white cat resting in the background, surrounded by various items including cushions and electronic cords.

A white cat with a collar and bell sits on top of an aquarium containing aquatic plants and substrate. Behind the aquarium is a dark wooden shelf unit displaying books, decorative items, and a red ornament.

A white cat stands on hind legs reaching up toward festive Christmas decorations, including shimmering gold and purple tinsel garland and ornaments on a wooden floor.

A white cat sits in front of an elaborate holiday display featuring a large silver disco ball, gold tinsel garland with warm lights, red ornaments, and various festive decorations in a doorway.

Originally posted on my site: https://michaelharley.net/posts/2026/07/11/please-meet-our-cat-lennie/

[–] michaelharley@infosec.pub 5 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Sorry about the managed post at first.

I'm new to the community so sorry about the basic question but is this type of post ok here? This is a blog post that I put on my site. Do we prefer to have the full post like this with the link or do we prefer to just have a link and intro?

 

Rachelle and I bought our house in Richmond in late 2022 and moved in early 2023. The ULTRALOQ U-Bolt Pro Z-Wave Smart Lock was the very first smart device I installed after setting up Home Assistant.

Requirements

Our must-have requirements were the lock must work with Home Assistant, and it must have a fingerprint sensor. Everything else was just nice-to-haves.

The setup

After doing lots of reading about smart locks and Home Assistant, I eventually landed on the ULTRALOQ U-Bolt Pro Z-Wave Smart Lock. We have the same lock on both the front door and the back door btw!

I did have to install their app in order to set up users and modify PINs and such. But I only have to use their app if I'm updating users.

  • Controller: Home Assistant Z-Wave JS
  • Radio: Home Assistant Connect ZWA-2
  • Locks: ULTRALOQ U-Bolt Pro Z-Wave Smart Lock

First impressions vs. now

Physically installing the locks was pretty straightforward, and the instructions were clear. The Z-Wave onboarding workflow was the standard one for Z-Wave devices. You put Home Assistant and the device in pairing mode, and then you confirm with the PIN from the device. Easy peasy.

I'd say the build quality is average. It's nothing to write home about but the locks seem sturdy enough. I've had to tighten the mounting screws up at least once over the past 3½ years, which I think is a normal and expected thing, so no points off there.

Living with them day to day

The #1 usability requirement for us was the fingerprint sensor on the lock. We did not want to have to mess with keys or fish out our phones or even enter a code to unlock the doors. So the main way, other than our arriving-home automations, that we unlock the door is with our fingerprints.

The fingerprint reader works fine. We often have to try the sensor twice, but it's not a huge problem. A more accurate sensor would be nice!

The other main use case is friends or pet sitters who come to feed the cats while we're out of town. For that, we just provide people with the door code and that has generally worked reliably. There was one time when our friends were trying to gain access in the afternoon when the front door lock was directly in the sun and had overheated or something. Our friend couldn't make the lock work. We had to unlock it remotely but that only happened once.

Reliability over 3½ years

I've had very few problems with the locks. As previously noted, we did have an issue with the lock overheating because it was directly in the sun during the summer, and it just kind of became unavailable for a little bit.

The coating on one of the fingerprint sensors has started to peel/flake, as you can see in the photo below. It doesn't seem to affect the accuracy of the sensor though as it still works fine!

A black rotary dial keypad mounted on a bright green wooden surface. The keypad features numbered buttons 0-9 arranged in a circular pattern around a central rotating dial, with 'UltraLoo' branding visible at the bottom.

The fingerprint sensor is in the center, and you can plainly see the coating has started to flake and peel. It still works fine! (Richmond, VA · July 2026)

I pulled the Home Assistant data, and we have to replace the batteries about every three months or so. We tried rechargeable, but they don't really work that well, so we went back to Energizer disposable. The gold standard would be a lock that was on mains power with a built-in battery backup. The main problem is that the locks don't seem to update their reported battery level until it drops to about 16%, so it basically goes from 100% to 16% (and sometimes straight to 0%) after 3 months.

Battery graph

(Richmond, VA)

Home Assistant / Z-Wave

Once I added the locks to Home Assistant, they work locally without their app. The only thing we need the app for is if we're modifying users/PINs.

Here are our main automations:

  • Automatic locking: The locks automatically lock themselves after 10 minutes.
  • Bed time locking: When the house goes into sleep mode, the locks automatically lock.
  • People leaving locking: When Home Assistant detects someone has left the home zone, the locks automatically lock.
  • Arriving home automatic unlock: When Home Assistant detects someone has returned home from being away, the doors automatically unlock. This one is probably my favorite!

What broke / what annoyed

Nothing has really flat out broken, but there are a few annoyances.

Fingerprint sensor and humidity

We live in Richmond, VA and it gets humid here in the summer. Every morning for about 2 months, both locks are beeping when we get up. Moisture has accumulated from humidity on the fingerprint sensor, and it's reading it like someone is trying to use the sensor. They just beep and beep and beep for a few hours in the morning. Both the front door and the back door have coverings. The front porch is a porch, of course, and the back porch has a big permanently attached awning, so neither lock is directly open to the elements. This is by far the #1 annoyance.

A black rotary telephone dial mounted on a green painted wall, showing numbers 0-9 arranged in a circle around a central metal finger hole, with water droplets covering its surface.

Beep beep beep (Richmond, VA · July 2026)

Unreliable battery reporting

As previously mentioned, the battery reporting is not very good. The locks only report their battery level when they get to about 16%, then it drops from 100% to 16% in an instant. It hasn't bit us yet, but it would be better if it would report the battery level in the way everyone expects it to.

More accurate fingerprint sensor

This is a minor quibble but it would be nice if the fingerprint sensor were more accurate. This has not been a deal breaker for us but still.

Verdict

★★★☆☆

Overall, the locks are fine. I'd give them three stars out of five. I think these specific locks are discontinued now, though, so even if I did want to recommend them, I don't think it's possible for someone to buy one new.

The perfect lock for our use case would be a Yale or Schlage lock that was officially in the Works with Home Assistant program, worked over Z-Wave, and had an accurate and moisture-resistant fingerprint sensor.

What's your favorite smart lock and why did you pick it?

Originally posted on my site: https://michaelharley.net/posts/2026/07/09/3-years-with-the-ultraloq-u-bolt-pro-z-wave-smart-lock/

[–] michaelharley@infosec.pub 3 points 1 week ago

KeePassXc and syncthing on Linux. KeePassDx and syncthing on Android.

[–] michaelharley@infosec.pub 8 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I run Calibre-Web in Docker (linuxserver.io image) and read on a Kobo. My desktop Calibre library on my laptop is the source of truth; Syncthing replicates it to the server where Calibre-Web serves it, and the Kobo pulls books over Kobo Sync