Unifi outages are only an issue if you're paying for their cloud based controller instead of running it locally.
MangoPenguin
That's only if you're using their cloud management BS.
If you're running it locally it doesn't rely on any external systems.
Yeah and gas stations often have an employee and cameras around which probably makes theft occurrences less likely compared to a charging station that has no one around and likely no dedicated cameras in place.
I wonder how they think that's possible, the attempts I've made at having an "AI" produce working code have failed spectacularly.
Odd, I've had a Pixel, Oneplus 7 pro, and now a Galaxy S21 and they all pick up my DNS server from DHCP without any issues.
If you have private DNS turned off it doesn't, unless maybe you have some manufacturer specific weirdness going on with extra software.
Does a PC connected to the same wifi network as the phone get the proper DNS servers and work like it should?
Strange, have you checked the interface info on Android to see what DNS info it's getting from the DHCP server?
Also check that it's getting an IP on the 192.168.x.y network, and not some other subnet if the AP is doing funky things.
Do you have private DNS enabled on Android? That would use a public DNS server by default regardless of what DHCP configures.
Also check your browsers, some have their own DNS settings.
Frigate has been great, I've run it for years now.
Using OpenVINO on my Intel iGPU for hardware accelerated object detection and encode/decode.
They can't.
Most guides on installing things or help on fixing things will offer terminal commands, so I can see how that could certainly lead to that feeling as a new user.
Also depending on the DE and stuff certain very basic obvious settings are not available in the GUI, like fractional scaling on KDE which has to be done by editing some config file first.