If the Flirc side of things is working, this should fill in the hot keys correctly. Using the Harmony remote press the button you just set in Flirc (vera link). In Keyboard Maestro icreate a new macro and say I want it to be triggered by a “hot key”.Ĭlick the mouse inside the “this hot key” box and then Keyboard Maestro is waiting for you to press the keyboard combination you want it to be triggered on. I select the Panasonic TC-P65VT30 “device” which I have already added to my Harmony (I also renamed it Flirc), I press the “vera link” button (though it could be any button).įlirc flashes to say it has added it. Yes it might sound like a lot of faffing, and it is, but it works and is very flexible. So whilst the API is a little lacking, you can easily hook several things together. Turn on the fan via a remote power switch from the remote. I also use the Harmony to control individually the volume levels of Squeezelite and Kodi. Once the buttons are in the Harmony Hub I can use openHAB to simulate presses.Į.g I have a “good night” sequence in openHAB that i trigger with HomeKit, it starts to dim the lights downstairs, lights the bedroom and landing, checks to see if the harmony states that an activity is running (and which one) then powers it all off. Keyboard Maestro lets me do anything, I can fire a shell script to send a http request to openHAB, open an Application, send shortcuts specifically to an application. (I don’t know if you have a Mac, if not I am sure there are equivalent applications for whatever platform you need) Then, I use Keyboard Maestro (though any custom keyboard shortcut trigger thing will work like BetterTouchTool, Script Events, even the built in Mac system prefs) to do something when those keys are pressed.
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