[aprssig] Really CHEAP Puck-type USB GPS Receiver -- WORKS GREAT!
Steve Noskowicz
noskosteve at yahoo.com
Sat Jan 28 01:31:53 EST 2012
AHHHHH! Now I get it! Finally! sheesh! I never could "get" this virtual com port / "PORT SPLITTER" thing. It allows one real HARDWARE port to be accessed by many applications. Not the other way-round.
Sort of a software port sniffer octopus style.... par excellence.
a "port already open" killer.
Now THAT makes sence. Sheesh Dense-o-ramma some times.
Dense-o-meter back down to zero.
--
73, Steve K9DCI
>
> I received my USD $25 Globalsat BU-353 USB GPS
> today. Within 3 minutes
> of
> delivery, I had it plugged into a USB port on my Panasonic
> CF-51 Toughbook
> (15"
> CoreDuo 1.6 GHz laptop), and working perfectly with
> Visual GPS, MapPoint,
> UIview, TopoUSA 8.0 --AND-- Precision
> Mapping 9.0. All simultaneously
> via
> the freeware XPort GPS port splitter.
> Get this extremely useful GPS
> utility
> here:
>
> . <http://www.curioustech.net/xport.html>
>
> As soon as I plugged the BR-353 in, the existing Prolific
> driver on my
> system (used with several other USB GPSes and Argent Data's
> generic
> serial<-->USB
> dongle) immediately enabled it. One reboot,
> and it acquired lock in about
> 1
> minute positioned by a BASEMENT window under an overcast
> Michigan winter
> sky.
>
> Normally, I have XPort intercept the physical COM 1 port on
> the Toughbook
> (that I use for a serial GPS) and output virtual COM4
> through COM12 which I
> use with the various apps. All I had to do was change
> XPort's INPUT port
> from COM1 to the virtual COM16 created by the Prolific
> driver to get
> everything to work with the USB Globalsat instead. No
> changes to any of the
> apps required at all.
>
> The unit is very small, lightweight but nicely finished,
> with a beveled
> round case that looks like a tiny flying saucer about 2
> inches (5 cm)
> diameter.
> Should be fairly aerodynamic at high speeds mounted to the
> roof of a
> vehicle.
> The magnet embedded in the underside is powerful enough to
> stick to a
> textured vertical surface such as a refrigerator without
> slipping.
>
> Interestingly, the plastic case does NOT have the usual
> sonic-welded
> closure.
> It is actually held together with 3 tiny Phillips-head
> screws, so opening &
> hacking the device (serial output???) non-destructively
> should be possible.
>
> A single small low-intensity red LED (thank god not one of
> those
> screamingly-bright blue LEDs currently fashionable on
> digital gadgets!)
> lights solidly during acquisition (verifies USB power)
> and starts flashing
> when lock
> is achieved (like the GPS legend on the Kenwood D700
> screen). This
> indicator
> will NOT be a blinding distraction on top of a car's dash at
> night.
>
> I have run it with both the Panasonic Toughbook and an Acer
> ZG5 netbook
> successfully. This gadget is definitely an
> excellent value.
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ---
>
> --
>
> Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
> Skype: WA8LMF
> Home Page: http://wa8lmf.net
>
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> UIview Released! *****
> http://wa8lmf.net/aprs/PMap9_Notes.htm
>
>
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>
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>
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>
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