In Taiwan there are no neutral wires in the light switches, so for me, it was great to be able to get one fitted without having to ship a whole raft of Lutron products. Still, this is not essentially a US market product, although along with Lutron, this is one of the few 110-120v smart switches out there that doesn’t require a neutral wire. The surround has the Greenbank branding, however, so if that’s something that would bother you, having the name sideways, then look elsewhere. This wouldn’t matter in one sense, as these switches themselves don’t have any distinguishing marks. These switches are primarily designed for the Taiwanese market, and while Taiwan and North America share the same dimension when it of switches, plugs and outlets, for some reason Taiwan have their switches laid out horizontally or in Landscape, compared to US switches. Greenbank makes three versions of the G-switch – 1,2 and 3 gang versions. Profile of G-Switch revealing connections This is also a Bluetooth-based device, so while you don’t need to worry about the strength of your wifi signal, you do need to be within range of a home hub, be that an Apple TV or a HomePod. The most important thing to note is that this is indeed HomeKit compatible, and comes with three instances of the HomeKit code – one on the plastic part of the packaging (hidden behind the front right cardboard panel), one with the accompanying booklet, and finally one on the switch itself, beneath the faceplate. The front of the packaging does give you all basic the information you need in small bullet points at the front, and if you were wondering where the ‘Works with Apple HomeKit’ badge is, fear not, as it’s located on the rear of the box. The top has the handle for the purposes of hanging in stores, but design-wise there’s nothing especially remarkable about it. ![]() I’m going to make short work of the packaging part today, but safe to say, these switches come in a reasonably well-protected box, with a ‘window’ to show the product, which itself is protected by a moulded, clear plastic holder. ![]() Process files that contain these characteristics without the -g option.Here we have the 2-gang version of the Greenbank ‘G-Switch’, which is essentially a HomeKit compatible, wired or in-wall light switch, but let’s start with the presentation. Files that reuse source tokens between objects must be loaded without the -g option.Įxtended attributes and abstract resources are not supported during graph writing. ![]() While permissible in IDML, these files cannot be processed with the -g option due to current limitations. Run the file without the -g option to pinpoint a problem.Ĭertain IDML files reuse source token values for more than one object. Error messages indicating the specific object that caused the failure are not available due to current limitations. If any single element does not satisfy naming rules, or it fails to be written to the database for any reason, the entire graph, or a subset of elements might fail to be persisted. ![]() This behavior is a normal part of the algorithm. However, the dummy source tokens display on individual object attributes as well as the bulk load log file. The use of dummy source tokens is harmless, and these source tokens do not display as launch in context tokens. Therefore, if the -g option is provided and no source token is available for an object, a dummy source token is automatically generated for that object using the required object ID from the XML file. Source tokens, however, are an optional value in an IDML XML file. Restriction: Because of current API limitations, the IDML file must have source tokens present for each object in order to perform graph writing. The z/OS DLA is the only known DLA that is configured to load with the -g switch. Loading the data with the -g switch requires that XML follows a much more stringent set of requirements than loading data without the -g switch. There are stringent requirements for XML load with the -g switch.
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