ccoors is an independent developer whose open-source utilities orbit the home-automation and robotics ecosystem, with the single published title Valeronoi exemplifying a focused, hacker-friendly approach. Valeronoi acts as a graphical companion to the Valetudo custom firmware for Xiaomi-compatible robot vacuums: it listens for Wi-Fi signal-strength broadcasts the vacuum emits while cleaning, records the coordinates, and overlays a color-coded Voronoi diagram on the floor plan so owners can see dead zones, repeaters that are too far away, or channels congested by neighbors. Typical use cases include placing additional access points before scheduling room-specific routines, troubleshooting random dock-connection losses, or simply satisfying the curiosity of users who like to treat their home like a miniature RF laboratory. Because the program consumes only the vacuum’s telemetry stream, it runs happily on a spare laptop beside the router and exports SVG/PNG maps that can be archived or shared in forums. The codebase is intentionally lightweight—Python/Qt, no cloud logins—so it appeals to tinkerers who already compile Valetudo from source and prefer to keep mapping data local. All ccoors software, including the latest build of Valeronoi, is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are fulfilled through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always deliver the newest release, and support batch installation alongside other applications.

Valeronoi

Valeronoi (Valetudo + Voronoi) is a companion for Valetudo for generating WiFi signal strength maps. It visualizes them using a Voronoi diagram.

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