Looks cool by why the price? Wasn't Altos for Android free?
Does it work with TeleGPS?
-Original Message-
From: altusmetrum On Behalf Of Keith Packard
Sent: Wednesday, April 4, 2018 1:43 AM
To: Altus Metrum
Subject: [altusmetrum] [AD] Altus Metrum announces AltosUI for iOS
Altus Metrum
"Tim Cubbedge" writes:
> Looks cool by why the price? Wasn't Altos for Android free?
All Altus Metrum software is open source and will remain free of
charge. Unfortunately, there are both legal and technical reasons that
our code just can't be used on devices based on Apple's iOS. Those of
you
Any support for TeleBT v3?
Sent from my electronic leash
> On Apr 4, 2018, at 11:34, Bdale Garbee wrote:
>
> "Tim Cubbedge" writes:
>
>> Looks cool by why the price? Wasn't Altos for Android free?
>
> All Altus Metrum software is open source and will remain free of
> charge. Unfortunately,
Will Marchant writes:
> Any support for TeleBT v3?
Nope, sorry, for compatibility with iOS devices you need TeleBT v4.
The issue is that Apple locked down Bluetooth on iOS such that there's
no way we could work with it at all... It wasn't until we changed BT
modules to a new one that also supp
Bryan Duke writes:
> Thanks a ton, Keith.
>
> Like you mentioned a while back, I was hoping I could have the USB
> start up normally, wait a bit, disable the USB & enable the serial
> port. Can’t I just call ao_usb_disable() before ao_serial_init() ?
Yes, and then flip the PA9_PA10 PA11_12 remap
Is there an easy way to tell which version our BT module is?
On Wed, Apr 4, 2018 at 9:37 AM Bdale Garbee wrote:
> Will Marchant writes:
>
> > Any support for TeleBT v3?
>
> Nope, sorry, for compatibility with iOS devices you need TeleBT v4.
>
> The issue is that Apple locked down Bluetooth on i
Chris Attebery 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 in
Easy enough. Thanks BDale.
On Wed, Apr 4, 2018 at 10:06 AM Bdale Garbee wrote:
> Chris Attebery 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 progra
Great. I’ll do that.
Just to make sure I’m not missing anything... there doesn’t happen to be a
TeleMini simulator I can run on Debian, is there? It’d be great to not have to
deploy to the device for testing every time I change a line of code.
Thanks!
-Bryan
> On Apr 4, 2018, at 9:44 AM, Keith
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 s
Bryan Duke writes:
> Great. I’ll do that.
>
> Just to make sure I’m not missing anything... there doesn’t happen to
> be a TeleMini simulator I can run on Debian, is there? It’d be great
> to not have to deploy to the device for testing every time I change a
> line of code.
Nope; that would have
I hear ya. I was mostly just hoping to avoid bricking it. Thankfully the STM32
is pretty forgiving. Yay for having the debug port as a safety net.
-Bryan
> On Apr 4, 2018, at 11:42 AM, Keith Packard wrote:
>
> Bryan Duke writes:
>
>> Great. I’ll do that.
>>
>> Just to make sure I’m not miss
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