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#81
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![]() "EridanMan" wrote in message ups.com... On Jul 11, 2:22 am, "Blueskies" wrote: "EridanMan" wrote in oglegroups.com... Ok, as a 25 year old "Senior" Mobile Framework engineer with a dozen... BTW, the reason I have that embedded board is because of this very topic... Although I was focusing more on PMA instrumentation replacement, not handheld GPS's. Do you have any stock? LOL... Nah, currently I'm just a tech dork learning Embedded system digital signal processing in my spare time. I've got ideas of where to go with it, but before I go convincing anyone else, I need to convince myself it's practical. http://www.grtavionics.com/efis_horizond_series_1.htm |
#82
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![]() "EridanMan" wrote in message ups.com... So can you load the 496 software onto your ARM board ? There is nothing sacred about the 496's software. As I said, any given month I hand A complex menu user interface to one of our mid- level programmers and expect something cool back in three days to a week (Far in excess of what you would need in a mobile device- Smooth scrolling, live sprite elements, etc), all switchable so that we can hit the full range of handsets without difficulty (and designed with relative references to work on any screen size from 96x74 on up) The 'hard' part is the GPS interface, and even that is growing more and more trivial, with SiRF and others now offering integration directly into an onboard embedded operating system with a runtime library (rather than formerly having to process the analog signal to digital and parse the data yourself). Just go to your local electronics shop and see how trivially available in-car GPS's are now, from every manufacturer... The technology is _NO_ different (not even more reliable). Hell, the 'truly' hard part for any device I would want to build would be the 3d engine, and even those are coming available for some of the wider-supported embedded platforms... If not, I'm good friends with the gentleman who did the 3d engine for Commanche and several other mid-90s products, so worse comes to worse I could do my own. (I'm very interested in 'virtual-forward' views and perspective terrain). The map data itself is fairly trivial... a bit of licensing expense, that's all. It actually strikes me more and more that, I will bet you dollars to donuts that the only reason Lawrence and Avmap don't have XM weather is an exclusive contract with Garmin that Garmin is paying good money to maintain... (that's how things work in my industry, its not about the technology, its about the Licenses... its not what do you make, its who do you have). Why take the risk on designing a new project when for a stipend per month you can have the whole market to yourself? I have _NO_ evidence of this of course... But its standard fare business practice in my industry, and frankly I would be surprised if that _wasn't_ the case. Wish I had the cash to play with a 496 and clone it's TSOP if it has one. 3m the 496 hahahaha!!! 1 Weather sub for all. |
#83
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: 3. You want to check the runways at your destination airport, which is NOT displayed. (Remember, you're zoomed in so that you can see stuff.) The 496 has the runways stored in its database -- all you have to do is put your cursor on the desired airport and hit "enter" to see them all. 4. In order to click on the desired airport, you must "slew" the cursor off the edge of the screen in order to find it. This means hold the arrow button down, slew to the edge of the screen -- wait three seconds while the screen disappears and reappears -- and continue. The REALLY bad thing is that the cursor doesn't stop moving when the screen disappears, so that in those three seconds you can easily WAY over-shoot your target airport. (I've even ended up in a different state during the time it's blank.) 5. Repeat ad nauseum. This process must be performed in order to see ANY of the good stuff, including accessing the AOPA restaurant/hotel guide, radio frequencies, field elevation, airport diagrams, METAR and TAF weather -- you name it, you've got to put your cursor on the airport and push "enter" to activate it -- which means slewing. RTFM. Press and hold the Direct To button. There's your menu. |
#84
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RTFM. Press and hold the Direct To button. There's your menu.
That works for your destination only. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#85
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: RTFM. Press and hold the Direct To button. There's your menu. That works for your destination only. That's what you asked for under #3. |
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