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#21
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On Sep 28, 12:06*pm, Ramy wrote:
On Sep 25, 12:16*pm, Max Kellermann wrote: Ramy wrote: Good discussion. I decided it is time to replace my 4700 PDA (which keep freezing on me recently *when it gets too hot) with a Droid running XCSoar. My understanding that the Dell Streak mini is the best option currently, and am getting ready to get one on eBay. That's right, the Streak Mini has the best sunlight readable display. Get one while you can, it's out of production. What is not clear to me is what else will I need to be able to connect it to my 302 and the glider battery, including cradle, without having to build it myself or pay more than the cost of the tablet itself. There are two options for the data connection: a Bluetooth adapter (easy), or the IOIO (you need to solder it). The battery connection is easy: the CAI 302 has a DC 5V outlet, which you connect to a USB plug. *This is how my panel looks: *http://max.kellermann.name/gallery/f.../PICT0423_1024... Max Thanks Max. Any suggestions for cradle? Also, now that the Amazon Kindle Fire was announced, perhaps it could be a better solution? Ramy It sounds like the Kindle Fire hardware is similar to the color Nook. Nook has the advantage of an SD slot and is hackable.... Thanks, Craig |
#22
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Hi Paul,
I don't own a glider, only club and rental. I own SeeYou mobile and PC with several iPaqs. SeeYou has several bug$ that never get fixed. And the iPaq hardware is horribly old and slow. So I tried XCSoar on my Droid X Android phone. It's so much faster, larger and more readable screen. I do not have an external GPS for the Droid, so it's sort of my backup GPS for now. I ran them both and got some IGC file discrepancies that may be from lack of external antenna for the Droid X. Anyway, I think XCSoar is amazing. The shaded circle around your glider showing wind aware landout point based on polar, safety altitude etc is very nice. XCSoar has improved dramatically recently. Porting to Android and great features. I still occasionally get kicked out of the app and have to restart it, but it happens less with each upgrade. That said, this type of thing happens with SeeYou and iPaq too. Hoping for more refinements from XCSoar namely some kind of color coded nav boxes like SeeYou so you can quickly id data. Sean Fiddler is right. People keep begging for these commercial apps to port to modern hardware. I've seen the Oudie but I think it terrible in full sun. The iPaqs are better because the screen sort of uses the sun to light the image. Oudie is much better in the shade though. Anyway, but thumbs up for XCSoar! ... Aaron |
#23
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Hi Aaron,
I'm sorry, but I must respectfully disagree with your statements below about the Naviter Oudie. I find it to be fast and significantly brighter in sunlight than any iPAQ. The only devices that are brighter are the much more expensive LX8000, LX8080, LX98000, ClearNav, Ultimate, and LX Mini Map. Please mention the bugs in SeeYou Mobile that have not been fixed. I think it works great and is very well supported. I think the new devices do look interesting, but the Oudie has been and continues to be hugely popular. I've sold 336 so far. Customers seem to like them very much - and tell their friends about them. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "akiley" wrote in message ... Hi Paul, I don't own a glider, only club and rental. I own SeeYou mobile and PC with several iPaqs. SeeYou has several bug$ that never get fixed. And the iPaq hardware is horribly old and slow. So I tried XCSoar on my Droid X Android phone. It's so much faster, larger and more readable screen. I do not have an external GPS for the Droid, so it's sort of my backup GPS for now. I ran them both and got some IGC file discrepancies that may be from lack of external antenna for the Droid X. Anyway, I think XCSoar is amazing. The shaded circle around your glider showing wind aware landout point based on polar, safety altitude etc is very nice. XCSoar has improved dramatically recently. Porting to Android and great features. I still occasionally get kicked out of the app and have to restart it, but it happens less with each upgrade. That said, this type of thing happens with SeeYou and iPaq too. Hoping for more refinements from XCSoar namely some kind of color coded nav boxes like SeeYou so you can quickly id data. Sean Fiddler is right. People keep begging for these commercial apps to port to modern hardware. I've seen the Oudie but I think it terrible in full sun. The iPaqs are better because the screen sort of uses the sun to light the image. Oudie is much better in the shade though. Anyway, but thumbs up for XCSoar! ... Aaron |
#24
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akiley wrote:
I still occasionally get kicked out of the app and have to restart it, but it happens less with each upgrade. That said, this type of thing happens with SeeYou and iPaq too. We expect that this does not happen at all, and we take every bug report very serious. On Windows CE, the unstable operating system and ancient flaky hardware is responsible for most crashes. But on Android, once we get a good bug report, it's usually fairly easy to fix. What we need in a bug report is a "logcat" (Android's system log). Install an app such as "CatLog" from the market. When XCSoar crashes, use CatLog to save the log to a file. Upload that file to a bug report on our bug tracker (http://www.xcsoar.org/trac/newticket). Bugs don't get fixed magically, they only get fixed if users report them to us. (And thanks for praising XCSoar, all on the team are putting a lot of sweat into it ...) Max |
#25
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On Sep 30, 2:29*am, Max Kellermann wrote:
akiley wrote: I still occasionally get kicked out of the app and have to restart it, but it happens less with each upgrade. *That said, this type of thing happens with SeeYou and iPaq too. We expect that this does not happen at all, and we take every bug report very serious. *On Windows CE, the unstable operating system and ancient flaky hardware is responsible for most crashes. *But on Android, once we get a good bug report, it's usually fairly easy to fix. What we need in a bug report is a "logcat" (Android's system log). Install an app such as "CatLog" from the market. *WhenXCSoarcrashes, use CatLog to save the log to a file. *Upload that file to a bug report on our bug tracker (http://www.xcsoar.org/trac/newticket). Bugs don't get fixed magically, they only get fixed if users report them to us. (And thanks for praisingXCSoar, all on the team are putting a lot of sweat into it ...) Max Thanks Max, I attempted to do a bug report a few months ago as per your instructions on your forum. I downloaded catlog, but I couldn't figure out what triggered it my crash. My luck, every time I ran CatLog it wouldn't crash. For that reason I didn't do an "official" bug report. But you fixed something because I've been using the 6.2.1 with no problems so far. Ran it for several hours today and a few yesterday. Noticed you did several Android bug fixes with 6.2.1 and that may have done the trick. Great App. ... Aaron |
#26
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On Sep 29, 10:57*pm, "Paul Remde" wrote:
Hi Aaron, I'm sorry, but I must respectfully disagree with your statements below about the Naviter Oudie. *I find it to be fast and significantly brighter in sunlight than any iPAQ. *The only devices that are brighter are the much more expensive LX8000, LX8080, LX98000, ClearNav, Ultimate, and LX Mini Map. Please mention the bugs in SeeYou Mobile that have not been fixed. *I think it works great and is very well supported. I think the new devices do look interesting, but the Oudie has been and continues to be hugely popular. *I've sold 336 so far. *Customers seem to like them very much - and tell their friends about them. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "akiley" wrote in message ... Hi Paul, I don't own a glider, only club and rental. *I own SeeYou mobile and PC with several iPaqs. *SeeYou has several bug$ that never get fixed. And the iPaq hardware is horribly old and slow. *So I triedXCSoaron my Droid X Android phone. *It's so much faster, larger and more readable screen. *I do not have an external GPS for the Droid, so it's sort of my backup GPS for now. *I ran them both and got some IGC file discrepancies that may be from lack of external antenna for the Droid X. Anyway, I thinkXCSoaris amazing. *The shaded circle around your glider showing wind aware landout point based on polar, safety altitude etc is very nice. XCSoarhas improved dramatically recently. *Porting to Android and great features. *I still occasionally get kicked out of the app and have to restart it, but it happens less with each upgrade. *That said, this type of thing happens with SeeYou and iPaq too. Hoping for more refinements fromXCSoarnamely some kind of color coded nav boxes like SeeYou so you can quickly id data. Sean Fiddler is right. *People keep begging for these commercial apps to port to modern hardware. *I've seen the Oudie but I think it terrible in full sun. *The iPaqs are better because the screen sort of uses the sun to light the image. *Oudie is much better in the shade though. Anyway, but thumbs up forXCSoar! *... Aaron I've mentioned these bugs on the Naviter forum and on this group. I don't have the latest SeeYou, I'm at 3.2. I lived with these bugs for a long time and didn't feel like spending more money on an upgrade to see if they were fixed or not. Here is my list. The wing loading changes when you leave the polar screen then come back. In Michigan, the magnetic track box is off 12 degrees. Sometimes the graphic thermal page shows blank the entire flight, sometimes it starts working part way through. The Required MC to your target (NavBox) doesn't take wind into account like the pseudo glideslope indicator does. I still like SeeYou mobile, and especially SeeYou PC, but I think these should have been fixed by free incremental upgrades. I paid good money for these apps :-) I'm glad people like Oudie/SeeYou combo, and I'm sorry I dissagree, but I still say in full sun, the Oudie is not as readable as the old iPacs. They have a brighter screen for sure, but in full sun, screen brightness isn't really a factor because the sun overpowers them so much. I put the Oudie side by side with several iPaqs in direct sun and played with every angle to the sun, and reflected them into my black t-shirt for maximum contrast and that was my personal conclusion. I forget the name for it, but the old iPaqs (3700 and 3850) have a screen that will sort of glow when held at the correct angle to full sun. Under a cloud I wouldn't be surprised if Oudie was as good or better. Maybe building a sun shade for the Oudie as I've heard people talk about. One of the new Android phones has this kind of screen which is recommend on the XCSoar forums. ... Aaron |
#27
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On Sep 28, 11:11*pm, Max Kellermann wrote:
Ramy wrote: Thanks Max. Any suggestions for cradle? On my photos, you can see the original Dell cradle for cars. *One of my club mates builds mounts from bended plastic. Max The following mounting for the streak was recommended to me: http://www.slipgripcarmounts.com/Sli...r_p_99842.html So looks like we have all the pieces. Except maybe for integrating with flarm in addition to 302? Will this require the K6Mux in addition to the K6bt? Ramy |
#28
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Ramy wrote:
Except maybe for integrating with flarm in addition to 302? Will this require the K6Mux in addition to the K6bt? No, just K6-Bt. If you want to connect multiple loggers/varios/..., then you can use multiple K6-Bt (I have two adapters, one for CAI302 and one for FLARM, to have airspeed/vario data and traffic data at the same time). K6-Mux is a deprecated product for legacy hardware. |
#29
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On Oct 1, 3:04*am, Max Kellermann wrote:
Ramy wrote: Except maybe for integrating with flarm in addition to 302? Will this require the K6Mux in addition to the K6bt? No, just K6-Bt. *If you want to connect multiple loggers/varios/..., then you can use multiple K6-Bt (I have two adapters, one for CAI302 and one for FLARM, to have airspeed/vario data and traffic data at the same time). *K6-Mux is a deprecated product for legacy hardware. When I dig more into the various accessories needed, I find the pricing, hmm, interesting... - The amazing software, accumulative of many developers hours, is free! - The hardware is priced right ($200-$400) - The accessories are expensive (BT adapters, mountings etc) - The cables are down right outragously expensive ($45-75$ for a DB9 to RJ-11/USB!!) are they made of gold?? Obviously I am in the wrog business, writing software. Should make cables instead... Anyone can recommend a more reasonable source to purchase those cables? Ramy |
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