I think $20 is fair for the iOS app. I write software for the App Store and I know it takes a lot of engineering work to get something out there. Even at $20, they’ll likely never recoup their actual cost for making it.
That said, this has me wondering if I can add a BT module to my TeleDongle so that I don’t have to buy another rx. Also, I wonder if I could connect my iPhone to my Mac laptop to get the TeleDongle’s stream. Hmmm. -Bryan > On Apr 4, 2018, at 10:11 AM, Chris Attebery <chrisattebery1...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Easy enough. Thanks BDale. > >> On Wed, Apr 4, 2018 at 10:06 AM Bdale Garbee <bd...@gag.com> wrote: >> Chris Attebery <chrisattebery1...@gmail.com> writes: >> >> > Is there an easy way to tell which version our BT module is? >> >> There are two choices. One is to plug into it over USB and see what the >> software says it is (or run a terminal program, connect to the device, >> and use the 'v' command to see the product and firmware version info). >> The second is that if you know the serial number, the first TeleBT v4 >> unit was sn 3686. Any TeleBT with lower serial numbers won't work with >> iOS. >> >> Bdale > _______________________________________________ > altusmetrum mailing list > altusmetrum@lists.gag.com > http://lists.gag.com/mailman/listinfo/altusmetrum
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