Never give the customer what they think they want.

Sent from my Batcomputer

On Dec 12, 2011, at 12:18 PM, David McKenzie <[email protected]> wrote:

> Unfortunately this has been discussed before and Flex has stated that they
> made a design decision to require 1024x768 and will not back down from that
> despite low-cost, low-power systems being available with 1024x600 that mate
> perfectly with a Flex-1500.
> 
> On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 2:28 AM, James T Kirk <[email protected]>wrote:
> 
>> Kudos to Frank. Perhaps those that subscribe to the notion of you must
>> have a 6+ core dedicated beast running at 3+ gHz with 16+ Gbtye of memory
>> and a video card with more processing power than the Atom and then again as
>> much memory that take pride in <5% CPU usage with more caches than I have
>> sense should take note. We are the land of excess, power to the people.
>> Occupy Austin.
>> 
>> 
>> On 12/11/2011 8:57 PM, Frank Anderson wrote:
>> 
>>> Flex-1500 Survival Kit
>>> 
>>> Need to add 1024 x 600 display resolution.
>>> 
>>>    For over eight years I have lived out in a field. I have a 125 watt
>>> solar panel (56 x 25 3/4 inches) which in the summer time gives me up to
>>> 100 watts for maybe three hours a day. In the winter time I might get up to
>>> 50 watts for a couple of hours a day. The other day was overcast and I
>>> didn't get above 20 watts all day long. My notebook computers pull at least
>>> 60 watts and that prompted me to buy an e-Machine eM250 netbook; Intel Atom
>>> CPU N270 @ 1.6 GHz; 1.00GB Ram; 32-bit Operating System; Graphics - Mobile
>>> Intel 945 Express Chipset Family; which came with Windows 7 Starter (read -
>>> less Windoze Bloat), which pulls around 10 watts. Running PowerSDR v 2.2.3
>>> with Audio Pri Buffer Size set at 128, VAC Buffer Size set at 512, and all
>>> of the DSP Buffer Sizes set at 256, the CPU usage runs in the 60s. To be
>>> able to see the bottom 5 or 6 lines of the PSDR screen, I have to plug in
>>> an external monitor (read - an extra 30 or so watts that I really don't
>>> have available).
>>>    It seems that the display resolution default is set to 1024 x 768.
>>> With 600/768 equal to 25/32nds that would leave the bottom 7/32nds hidden.
>>> My first thought was to add scroll bars, which is better than not being
>>> able to access the bottom, but can be a real pain.
>>>    The second thought was to add a radio button in setup, (Netbook 1024
>>> x 600 display) which when checked would add a banner, (possibly the bottom
>>> part of the splash screen with a note stating "Netbook 1024 x 600 display
>>> is checked in Setup" so people would know why they were getting a banner on
>>> the bottom of the display.
>>>    The third thought came when I saw that the image content didn't
>>> change when the display resolution was changed while PSDR was running. The
>>> image content only changes if PSDR is stopped and restarted - indicating
>>> PSDR locks into the display resolution as it loads.
>>>    The second method might be a quick and easy way to test for a
>>> solution without having to write a lot of code.
>>>    I know my December 2009 netbook with an Atom N270 CPU is pretty
>>> obsolete, since the next generation used Atom CPUs in the 400 series and
>>> the current netbooks use Atom CPUs in the 500 series. I believe the Black
>>> Friday price for netbooks with the Atom 400 series CPU was around $158.00
>>> and Wal-Mart had Acer Netbooks with Atom 500 series CPUs regularly priced
>>> at $228.00 the other day.
>>>    I know the smallest size buffer settings are probably not the best,
>>> but I wanted to see if the netbook computer would max out or if there would
>>> be some headroom left. I believe a netbook computer, with a USB mouse with
>>> a scroll wheel, and the Flex-1500 would make an excellent Survival Radio
>>> Kit.
>>>    I would be interested in hearing the results some other people have
>>> using a similar setup. My internet connection is: travel three miles to
>>> Green River, Utah and try to find an open Wi-Fi access point, so I only
>>> connect once or twice a week.
>>> 
>>> To your survival,
>>> Frank Anderson, AC0XL
>>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Sent from my Communicator
>> 
>> 
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