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Gerry Schmitz wrote: I need ports for at least 3 monitors.
I certainly haven't tried but isn't that possible with USB (and a USB block of course)?
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Perhaps. I just know what I have and use now (2 HDMI and 1 DisplayPort) on my motherboard. My keyboard does have extra USB ports but are so underpowered as to be useless.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Hi,
The company I work for is using 13.56MHz RFID for a project. This project involves reading a tag and playing an audio track. I got a third party reader and could read the Tag UID fine but miss the 'extra' data embedded in the read/write section of the tag. Issue is I did my 13.56 Tag training at Texas Instruments and there was no mention of R/W sections of the tag, only an encrypted data section (used at the time for GasN'Go in Canada) so what I'm wondering has the spec changed or have we go a product using a protected area of the tag?
Glenn
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Thanks, I was thinking read back the UID, UID links to Audio track in the reader, plays audio track. I am not sure if this is the approach or not (I hope so). There does seem to be an issue with life of the batteries which indicates to me the RF Unit is being left on for too long. This then leads to why? I can power a reader than reads the UID from a low capacity power bank with no issues. From what I remember of the 13.56 training I did was there was a read only section that could only be read by a special reader which was developed and used on the Canadian GasN'Go system... Could we be possibly be using a 'protected' area of the card meaning some readers won't read all the data (other than the UID)... I will have read of the spec's you provide and hopefully have an answer..
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glennPattonWork3 wrote: life of the batteries which indicates to me the RF Unit is being left on for too long.
Huh?
Obviously you did not provide the full specification. There are musical devices that use RFID for control but those should have a fixed supply.
I was thinking maybe they wanted a security beep for each valid RFID and something else if invalid (or other states). But again should be fixed supply.
Perhaps a portable service reader and the beep indicates that it was read, successful or not. But then plans must be made for recharging or changing batteries (presumably rechargeables.)
But really none of that has anything to do with the RFID but rather with the design and engineering of the system/product.
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I am trying to prepare my guitar signal for as best as possible ADC response in order to detect harmonics to the 5th of the highest note of the guitar (1175 Hz for 22 frets), which is about 5875 Hz. This means that I need to be sampling at about 58.75 kHz, which is possible with the microcontroller and it's DSP functions.
I am using an STM32F407 Discovery board(https://www.chipsmall.com/Products/STM32F407G-DISC1_10343216.html).
So far, I have not come across any solutions that I am happy with.
Considerations that are important:
*Guitar output impedance: about 1M ohm.[br] *Anti-aliasing for the ADC[br] *Guitar signal of 500mV Vp-p max[br] *ADC input range 0-3.3V[br] *5V single supply[br] *Frequency range from 82Hz and 5875 Hz
Does anyone have any suggestions of a circuit that I can use? I have TL082, LM358 and LM741 opamps available, but I am open to other suggestions.
The goal of this element of the projects is to be able to use the first 5 harmonics and a sampled period of the guitar signal for further DSP.
This is what I have come up with so far - although I believe it's far from ideal.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated.
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Earlier this week, I started having problems with the local electricity supplier. My UPS'es kept triggering alarms and it turned out to be the power company lines were delivering over 130V.
Called the electric company and they determined that a line voltage regulator had failed. They bypassed the regulator and got my supply voltage down to about 125+- but then it would drop under the 105 volt low limit and cause my UPS'es to go into battery backup mode for a few seconds.
So here's the fun part:
One of the Windows 10 systems would failed to boot after a shutdown from the UPS---giving me a 0xc000021a stop code.
Tried Windows startup recovery, replacing the C drive, restoring backups, etc.---all the standard crap. System would not boot.
Tried disconnecting all four external disk drives that were attached via a USB 7 port hub. Still failed.
Finally disconnected everything, including internal drives and USB hubs (two attached) --- SYSTEM BOOTED!
Went through an isolation procedure to determine what was causing the boot failure. Got it down to one of the USB hubs, which was not plugged into the UPS, had gotten smoked somehow. It still looked like it was working but it caused Windows 10 to fail during the boot process.
Who would've thunk a USB hub could cause a boot failure on Windows 10?
Microsoft owes me for four days labor and several bottles of antacids.
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I always find these sort of failure stories interesting.
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I just bought this HP laptop[^]. I want to connect dual monitors, so I bought one of these on Amazon[^].
I hooked it up, went into Display, Multiple Displays, and clicked Detect - and it doesn't detect it.
Do I need an HP docking station? ANy thoughts on what's wrong?
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
Everything makes sense in someone's mind.
Ya can't fix stupid.
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Kevin Marois wrote: Do I need ... Why not ask HP, it's their product and they have help forums.
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Just noting that on more than one occasion using even the same laptop (not HP) I have experienced this sort of thing.
Usually involves a lot of experimentation and googling to get it to work. Googling will show multiple suggestions/causes.
I also haven't tried it with USB only though.
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You want 3 monitors? Why not use the HDMI port for "one" extra? Did you try rebooting after connecting everything?
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Hi, I Have a Seagate 1 TB USB mechanical hard drive.
It has either a corrupted partitions or they are Linux partitions. I don't know how to tell.
On my Windows machine, in Disk Management, I try to delete one of the partitions, after taking the drive offline, and it gives the error: "The media is write-protected."
Anyone know what kind of tool I can use to un-write-protect the drive?
SOLUTION:
Use the "diskpart" command line tool in Windows to remove the write protection. Simple.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
modified 12-Mar-23 17:24pm.
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Just a suggestion...
I looked for your previous posts about bluetooth and it didn't seem like you got any answers.
So perhaps there is a different site (not forum on this site) where more answers might show up?
Keep in mind that I am just trying to be helpful and far as I am concerned you can keep posting here. Maybe someone will wander by eventually that knows the answers.
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I don't know what the differences are, but the article looked like it might have some useful ideas, and since you are using Qt anyway. What I did notice was that the website has a number of forums, so that might be a better place for you to get help on a subject that few people (at least here on Codeproject) seem to be working in.
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Member 14968771 wrote: I am trying to stay away from "low energy" technology for now. My tip: If you have a choice, not dictated by external requirements (and that's what it sounds like), get into Bluetooth Low Energy as soon as possible. That is where things are happening nowadays. A whole lot of talk about 'Bluetooth' is in fact a short form of 'Bluetooth Low Energy'. Some of the new BLE application areas, such as the fairly new LC3 codec for BLE headphones, is really good, but will probably never be adapted to non-LE Bluetooth (according to a friend who has been actively working with the adaptation to BLE).
Expect any Bluetooth device running on batteries that you cannot reasonably charge every day to use BLE. Non-LE is primarily for stationary and semi-stationary equipment, plus your smartphone. The smartphone talks BLE to most other stuff.
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Member 14968771 wrote: I am not sure want to get into "client / server / host " discussion.
Member 14968771 wrote: keep your comments to yourself - no need to rub it in
Granted. You now have 2 wishes left.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Greetings Kind Regards May I please inquire will an appreciable/significant/useful/meaningful overall speed performance difference result comparing two PCs each w/ same version intel i7 same memory size i.e. 16GB same SSD for purpose of software development i.e. compile/link/build durations one w/ DDR3 memory other w/ DDR4 memory Thank You Kindly
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There is only one way to find out.
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Programming tool temporarily running on RAMDISK would benefit from higher bandwidth for file i/o during multi-threaded compiling and have much better random-access latency than SSD. But instead of upgrading RAM, you could buy a better CPU cooler and give it a bit overclock for cores & caches and have better performance in everything, not just compiling.
Because, CPU cache is used well in compiling codes because codes are converted to graphs of commands. Traversing graphs cause a lot of re-used data from memory that is mainly the CPU cache.
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I have one instance set up and working on another computer I did all the same steps (at least I think) to set it up on another computer, it works with CPU detection, but since it's an i3 I am trying to get the GPU detection working I am using an EVGA 1070 and I get this error on the log screen.
Object Detection (YOLO): (General Exception) : CUDA error: an illegal memory access was encountered
I am not sure how to troubleshoot the issue, I cloned the hard-drive from the working machine downloaded the 1070 driver and still received the same error.
I appreciate any help you have to give.
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Hi all,
Soon we will move to a different building with 2 +/- 100 square meters floors.
I want to have a mesh wifi network covering all the house / 2 floors.
That is the topology I am planning:
Second floor ==> Optical fiber ---> ISP ROUTER (working as ONT, configured in bridge mode/single point) ---> Unmanaged SWITCH [2 computers C1 and C2, a printer P1, a MESH ROUTER (alien amplifi, orbi...), a CAT 6 cable to another unmanaged switch at the first floor].
First Floor ==> unmanaged switch [2 computers C3 and C4, a printer P2, a MESH ACCESS POINT].
Questions:
Can we do this?
I mean can we connect the ISP router set in bridge mode to a switch and then connect a few devices AND the MESH ROUTER to that switch?
If one of the devices is a long cable to another switch on the first floor and there, we plug the MESH ACCESS POINT and several other devices...
Would C1 (computer on the second floor) be able to see C4 (computer on the first floor)?
Would the Mesh access point be connected to the MESH router using the physical cable?
Hope all this makes any sense.
Thank you all for your time and help.
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