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NYT Spelling Bee Answers for August 6 2024 (8/6/24)

The New York Times Spelling Bee is similar to games that feature a scrambled up set of letters that you have to find words within (or a word using all the letters!), but there’s a maddening twist–you can use letters more than once and all words must contain the letter in the center of the hive. If you’ve been scratching your head for a bit because you can’t get all the words for today’s Spelling Bee puzzle, we’ll help you out.

NYT Spelling Bee Answers August 6 2024

4 Letter Answers:

  • grim
  • grin
  • grip
  • prig
  • prim
  • ring

5 Letter Answers:

  • cirri
  • crimp
  • mirin
  • primp
  • ricin

6 Letter Answers:

  • miring
  • nigiri
  • ricing

7 Letter Answers:

  • griping
  • pricing
  • priming
  • rigging
  • rimming
  • ringing
  • ripping

8 Letter Answers:

  • 🐝crimping
  • cringing
  • grinning
  • gripping
  • primping

How to Play New York Times Spelling Bee

Below, you’ll find a list of rules and requirements to play the game.

  • Words must include the center letter of the hive (this letter has a yellow background).
  • No obscure words, no hyphenated words, no proper nouns, and no cuss words!
  • Letters can be used once (this is key to high scores!)
  • Words must contain 4 letters or more.
  • You must have a paid subscription to New York Times’ Games ($40/year, also available for a monthly fee).

Spelling Bee Tips

It will take some practice to get a feel for and get used to how the Spelling Bee is formatted, because trying to remember that you can use letters twice is quite the twist and requires you to visualize those extra possibilities mentally rather than visually on the screen in front of you. Here are some more tips that we have found useful in solving for words:

  • Look for prefixes and suffixes — that means things like re- (like renew), -ed (past tense of many words, like fixed), etc. These can be used multiple times and can help you find higher scoring words quickly.
  • Look for words that can be combined — while no hyphenation is allowed, there are words that are one word that really look like two, like “lifeline.”
  • Start with the required letter in the center first, and then start building out your words.

The post NYT Spelling Bee Answers for August 6 2024 (8/6/24) appeared first on Try Hard Guides.

How I upgraded my water heater and discovered how bad smart home security can be

The bottom half of a tankless water heater, with lots of pipes connected, in a tight space

Enlarge / This is essentially the kind of water heater the author has hooked up, minus the Wi-Fi module that led him down a rabbit hole. Also, not 140-degrees F—yikes. (credit: Getty Images)

The hot water took too long to come out of the tap. That is what I was trying to solve. I did not intend to discover that, for a while there, water heaters like mine may have been open to anybody. That, with some API tinkering and an email address, a bad actor could possibly set its temperature or make it run constantly. That’s just how it happened.

Let’s take a step back. My wife and I moved into a new home last year. It had a Rinnai tankless water heater tucked into a utility closet in the garage. The builder and home inspector didn't say much about it, just to run a yearly cleaning cycle on it.

Because it doesn’t keep a big tank of water heated and ready to be delivered to any house tap, tankless water heaters save energy—up to 34 percent, according to the Department of Energy. But they're also, by default, slower. Opening a tap triggers the exchanger, heats up the water (with natural gas, in my case), and the device has to push it through the line to where it's needed.

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Home Assistant’s new foundation focused on “privacy, choice, and sustainability”

Open Home Foundation logo on a multicolor background

Enlarge (credit: Open Home Foundation)

Home Assistant, until recently, has been a wide-ranging and hard-to-define project.

The open smart home platform is an open source OS you can run anywhere that aims to connect all your devices together. But it's also bespoke Raspberry Pi hardware, in Yellow and Green. It's entirely free, but it also receives funding through a private cloud services company, Nabu Casa. It contains tiny board project ESPHome and other inter-connected bits. It has wide-ranging voice assistant ambitions, but it doesn't want to be Alexa or Google Assistant. Home Assistant is a lot.

After an announcement this weekend, however, Home Assistant's shape is a bit easier to draw out. All of the project's ambitions now fall under the Open Home Foundation, a non-profit organization that now contains Home Assistant and more than 240 related bits. Its mission statement is refreshing, and refreshingly honest about the state of modern open source projects.

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