I use a superRMS 2 from these guys:
http://www.remotemonitoringsystems.ca/
The software they put on these things is just a little more polished than the
packetflux stuff. I use both and love the cost of the packetflux equipment.
Http://www.irongoat.net/sites/mtsultan is a private link that let'
I'm using one now, quite happy with it. I can see amps in, amps out,
volts in, battery volts, and about 20 other variables.
On 10/26/2010 4:48 PM, Kristian Hoffmann wrote:
> If you have (or get) a MorningStar charge controller, you could use one
> of these...
>
> http://www.packetflux.com/ind
If you have (or get) a MorningStar charge controller, you could use one
of these...
http://www.packetflux.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=6&products_id=32&zenid=a701d853c4139d3f3c191b7dd586f1d0
Note that I've haven't personally tried one of these...but I want to.
-Kristian
On Tue, 20
Just to update and close this thread, I have, as of 10/26/10, received a
check from Pasedena Networks (wlanparts.com) for the full amount of what the
dispute was. Frank handled this very promptly and I want to make sure
everyone sees it was taken care of.
So I would like to apologize on this lis
http://www.stardot-tech.com/
- Original Message -
From: "Matt"
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 2:30 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Webcam
>> A group of radio stations that I provide phone and Internet service would
>> like to setup a webcam in a few of their studios
stardottech.com http://www.buckeyeocean.com and click on camera if you want to
see one.
-- Original Message --
From: Matt
Reply-To: WISPA General List
Date: Tue, 26 Oct 2010 15:30:00 -0500
>> A group of radio stations that I provide phone and Internet s
> A group of radio stations that I provide phone and Internet service would
> like to setup a webcam in a few of their studios to stream video to their
> website. Any suggestions on hardware and configuration?
Anyone know of a POE camera that supports PPPoE and simply FTP's a
JPEG every ~60 seco
Imagine interoperability of a TDMA type operation, you'd be free again to user
different manufacturers in low supply instances or what have you.
Imagine there's no problem, mixing cpe's, it's easy if you try. - John Lennon
-- Original Message --
From: St
On 26 October 2010 13:20, Rafman® wrote:
> I recommend Axis cameras, hands down... If you visit my LiveStream channel,
> there are some recent tower cam demos, using an Axis Q6032 PTZ @250'.
>
> A year ago, I became Axis certifiied & have been doing a majority of tower
> security & web commerce a
I've found the Mobtix has very good outside endurance and amazing dynamic
range. I have them in various parts of the world without problems.
Before that, I used IQeye inside looking out through windows and they have
been quite good...a bit less of an image at night but auto-switch to B&W
if desire
I would LOVE to see a Tranzeo that talked Nstreme.
I am willing to donate a couple of CPQs to anyone who wants to take a
shot at it.
Also, anyone who has used ones they want to sell, hit me offlist. I
still have another 200 or so CPE/CPE80 radios that I need to replace
with CPQs or UBNT.
There was a vendor on one of these wireless lists selling some nice
looking ones... Mobtix or something like that.
They have had IIRC tens of thousands of them deployed for large event
security.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
On 10/26/2010 5:27 AM,
That's a pain for configuration, but what about general use? Are there
applications that it can be used elsewhere, perhaps a flash embed for a
website?
Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 1:20 PM, Rafman® wrote:
I recommend Axis cameras, hands down... If you visit my LiveStream channel,
there are some recent tower cam demos, using an Axis Q6032 PTZ @250'.
A year ago, I became Axis certifiied & have been doing a majority of tower
security & web commerce applications with them...
One caveat: They love MS I
IPERF on a linux box testing to an IPERF server with some real bandwidth.
Be sure to use multiple streams (concurrent connections). It was the only
way I could test a gigE connection.
Marco
WISPA Wants You! Join to
We've been using Axis cameras with Axis camera station.
It has a nice feature where the cameras only stream when they detect
movement so you save a considerable amount of bandwidth.
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 11:41 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> Most camera vendors have a DVR solution as well.
>
> -
Most camera vendors have a DVR solution as well.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
On 10/26/2010 10:58 AM, Forbes Mercy wrote:
> I'm interested in putting one to two cameras at each tower then having
> them stream into a single DVR at our head-end. How do
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=4558648
"In the IEEE 802.11n draft standard, beamforming is adopted as an
optional feature to improve signal reception and simplify receiver design."
Beamforming is available in 802.11N, though I don't know of any products
using that stand
I'm interested in putting one to two cameras at each tower then having
them stream into a single DVR at our head-end. How do we accomplish that?
On 10/26/2010 8:01 AM, Jason Hensley wrote:
> Axis camera
WISPA Wan
Ryan,
I like all those Tranzeo options as well. I did not know the ram was so tight
on them. I just thought that the ability to put ROS on them and if it worked
with Nstreame2 would solve some of my over populated towers. I really need
TDMA or some Universal Timing mech that works cross vendo
If money is not an issue then an Axis camera is GREAT. But, I've done a
cheap setup too with a $100 camera and windows media encoder streaming to
windows media server. Works great until there is a blip in connectivity and
the encoder loses connection to the server. Encoder has to be restarted.
I
An iMac (built in camera) and
http://www.ustream.tv/producer (let them do the web-site scaling for you)
-or-
http://support.apple.com/kb/DL764 (you do the scaling)
ryan
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 3:27 AM, Jeremie Chism wrote:
> A group of radio stations that I provide phone and Internet servic
The simplest way is to get a h.254 cam (I have some for sale for like
240 or so, contact me off-list). Then you set it up to either send
images every so often, or just havfe the website call the address. The
second way is to have some kind of PC with a camera and that streaming
to a media server.
What is missing from the CPQ-X line?
Let's see,
Text based config file upload.
TFTP mass install for the warehouse.
Config changes via simple curl statement (en masse)
SNMPread for 'important stuff' (there should be MORE!)
Pretty solid mounting (Oh god, do I hate that boot too though!)
Remember,
is there any other OS that would work on the Tranzeo TR-CPQ??
it sure would be awesome if we could put ubnt 3.6 firmware on there or
something
i have 50 TR-CPQ-15's rendered useless right now due to them never
getting there firmware right
would be awesome if someone could hack it ;)
On 10/2
Cool!
Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 9:03 PM, Ben West wrote:
> KSDK, a local TV station, recorded this interview with Minerva and myself
> in May. After editing the clip for 5months (?), they finally aire
A group of radio stations that I provide phone and Internet service would like
to setup a webcam in a few of their studios to stream video to their website.
Any suggestions on hardware and configuration?
Sent from my iPhone4
-
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