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#31
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
Is that documented somewhere, or would you have to put a sniffer on the line to analyze the traffic?
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#32
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
I have no idea. I've put zero effort into the project at the moment. I've run serial sniffers before for various work projects, so I have a reasonable idea how to go about it. I'm hoping it's actually just documented somewhere, though.
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#33
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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You can also find the source code for a slightly older version of both the factory firmware and bdc-comm in TI's RDK-BDC24 package. I have no idea whether VEX plans on making a similar release with the newest code. |
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#34
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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#35
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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#36
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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#37
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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#38
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
In the two regionals I've attended so far, I have only ever seen one robot lose comms. I didn't watch every match, but it's been one of the best years for this sort of thing since 2009 in my experience.
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#39
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
624 was having comms problems at Lone Star, but they definitively tied it to a radio reboot under heavy current draw. Unfortunately, they've swapped out everything, sometimes twice, in their attempts to fix it. I know they were fine in their last quals match, but I don't know if that stayed that way during the elims.
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#40
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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If your local library does not have it, use inter-library loan to get it. Or buy it. The demo code and code examples downloadable here show how to read and write some of the RS232 control pins, and how to read the Pentium's RDTSC 64-bit nanosecond timer. |
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#41
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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The trickiest part (but hardly difficult though) is to make a small passive circuit with caps and resistors to divide down the signal voltage and block the mic DC power coming out of the laptop mic port. It will work with just about any reasonable signal voltage, given the appropriate voltage divider. The limitation is the 96KHz sampling frequency. The upside is that it will store hours and hours of data (limited only by available disc space). |
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#42
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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Fortunately, Rob the head robot inspector, saw this once before with an AXIS camera and was able to point this out to us. |
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#43
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
Hah! 1551's pain was your gain! (Rob's first experience with the extreme wonkiness that can come from a frame-grounded Axis camera was at our expense.)
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#44
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
Based on reports from this thread and others, it seems that the bandwidth limits are either not in place or not working, at least not at all events. It also seems that the Quality of Service packet prioritization is not working properly either. Several people have reported needing to turn off or turn down camera resolutions to resolve lag and loss of comms issues not only for their robot but for others in the same match.
I was not at any of these events nor do I know anyone personally who has reported these symptoms, so it's second hand information at best. The fact remains that turning camera feedback to the driverstation down or off seems to have resolved many of the issues at events. Hopefully FIRST will address this in some regard in an update or blog post soon. |
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#45
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Re: THE HORROR! THE HORROR!
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Also, what's supposed to happen when multiple robots trip the bandwidth limit? Last edited by coalhot : 12-03-2013 at 00:00. Reason: Got rid of the annoying meme... |
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