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Brainstorming – Checking for Remote Power Failure Over the Internet

I live in Washington state, which, due to the amount of trees and their proximity to power lines, often means that I might lose power in my apartment, while just blocks away, everyone else is powered up. I also often visit my parents, and this has led to multiple instances where I am torn between spending the night at their house, where they still have power, or starting the drive back without knowing whether or not I will have hot water and my favorite electronics ready for use.

At these times, I have often wished for an easy way to check remotely, over the internet, whether or not my home has power. Building and setting up a home server is something on my to-do list (and has been on it for a while) and it would easily solve this issue, but with a potential snowstorm on the way, and a visit to my parents planned, I wanted to set something up in a jiffy. I was also thinking – given the plethora of internet-connected devices the average consumer, and I myself own, surely there must be some way to accomplish this already?

To be clear – the easiest solution is to simply check with the power utility company. However, since during the last outage their reporting system went down with the power (LOL) I was annoyed enough to look into my own method for checking.

Here are some of the ideas I explored. My quick solution for today is at the bottom (or click here to jump to it).

At this point, I started thinking “what devices do most people own, that are always plugged in, and already feature auto-restart / auto-boot on power failure and subsequent restoration?”…