Moderator: Soñadora
floating dutchman wrote:So, Back to my hijack....
My Mr 11 year old is doing Preforming Arts at school.
He comes home with some musical notes on a piece of paper that he has written, I want to hear his music...
I say to him that the computer speakers could play those notes, and that that there is a hard way for me to hear them, and an easy way.
Doesn't take him long to work out that the hard way is to write a program in BASIC and the easy way is to ask uncle Google.
He elects to do it the hard way.
I worked out the numbers to put into BASIC to get the notes (thanks uncle Google) and he sat down and entered the whole thing in.
I was only a very short piece of music but the way I got to hear it was a whole lot of fun.
Jeroen.
VALIS wrote:As far as KVM goes, I've used a wireless keyboard with built-in trackball at my navstation. The trackball is much better than a mouse when you have limited space and the boat is pitching and rolling. My navstation computer is a Windows machine, but I'm using a wireless K/M on a RPi and it is plug-and-play.
I've also got a small USB-connected monitor for the boat. It's very low power and gets power and video data over the USB connection. Here's a newer, bigger one (haven't tried this one myself, and can't promise RPi compatibility): https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824160215
BeauV wrote:re: DISPLAY
You might want to take a close look at some of the cases. Many add a back bezel which could be a much smaller. Because normal city-dwellers don't care about the difference between a 3/8" and a 3/4" thick screen, the mfg. doesn't bother to really make the thing ultra-thin. You may be able to remove the back bezel and attach the resulting thinner screen to the bulkhead.
Also, depending on how much wood working you want to do, a router can make a nice indent in your bulkhead into which you can insert the screen
(I love making work for people with suggestions![]()
)
TheOffice wrote:Rich,
There is a thread on Cruiser's Forum about problems installing OpenCPN on a Pi3. Check it out before you beat your head against the mast.
LarryHoward wrote:Ajax,
We use a Pi3 as the engine in a deployable, encrypted data/video security station packed in a pelican case and used in various places, including the sandbox. Only issue we have seen is heat related. Run hard, it's a heat mill and we had to add additional heat sinks and fans to the case to prevent shutdowns and failure, exposing the device to more corrosive humidity and that lovely powdery desert sand/dust than we would like. Admittedly, we push it pretty close to its performance limits, but I'd caution against burying the Pi in a small, unventilated compartment.
Ajax wrote:The one you linked says "no longer available."
I did discover this one as being specifically Pi3 compatible: https://www.amazon.com/GlobalSat-BU-353 ... Src=detail
I also found 3 good HDMI, 12v, Pi-compatible monitors, so no need to jump through all the hoops to make a USB monitor work.