[aprssig] Tomtom's For APRS (Question)
Andrew P.
andrewemt at hotmail.com
Mon Apr 2 09:08:55 EDT 2012
You were right, Sander. I tried my D72 on a different Windows XP system and got the "Installing new hardware" dialogs. But it was plug-and-play on old Linux (other than the annoying feature of reordering the device names of multiple USB-serial ports on every reboot).
Now, how to write software to auto-discover which device name my D72 showed up on _this_ reboot......
Andrew Pavlin, KA2DDO
------Original Message------
From: Sander Pool
To: aprssig at tapr.org
Sent: Apr 1, 2012 11:20 PM
Subject: Re: [aprssig] Tomtom's For APRS (Question)
If you did not need to install a driver that simply means you already
had a driver for the USB device installed. Silicon Laboratories must
have provided the serial to USB adapter for some other device you
already own. The installer is more than 8MB which is think is rather
huge. I made no statement about overengineering of the D72. I was
talking about the serial adapter driver.
Great news that you had a Linux driver too. If it could be ported to ARM
then it may work on the Raspberry PI which would validate my earlier
statement that these cheap Linux SOC based controllers may well take
over from smaller AVR and PIC based micro controllers.
73,
Sander W1SOP
On 4/1/2012 11:09 PM, Andrew P. wrote:
> The D72 itself can't be too overengineered. A moderately old distro of Linux (Fedora 13) and standard Windows XP can both easily access the D72 from multiple standard and custom applications (it's one of the TNCs with which I test my YAAC APRS client), but I've never installed any "standard" installer for it..
>
> So how hard can it be?
>
> Andrew Pavlin, KA2DDO
>
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