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#61
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On 2007-07-06, NW_Pilot wrote:
and knock them off for only a few hundred dollars? Hell I could crack/dump their their os in a few days and would give me an excuse to get my SMT rework / device programming equipment out of the attic. If you want to make a better GPS, Sparkfun Electronics sells all the parts with handy breakout boards for prototyping. An ARM7 based mcu should have enough power and even in quantites of 1 is around $10 or so. -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
#62
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... The Xbox 360 has sold badly. Less have been sold than even MS expected That may be the case, but they've still sold millions of the damned things, and they are EVERYWHERE. Walk into any gamer hangout or computer store in America, and half the store will be X-Box console games. The other half will be Playstation and Wii (which, although up and coming, still hasn't displaced the Big Two), with a tiny little corner devoted to PC games. If only Garmin sold 3% as much as the "failed" X-Box, maybe they'd install a decent processor in the 496. And if those gamers would learn to fly, instead of playing MSFS like our dear MX, then Garmin COULD sell millions of units. Sheesh! |
#63
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![]() "James Robinson" wrote in message . .. Jay Honeck wrote: The Xbox 360 has sold badly. Less have been sold than even MS expected That may be the case, but they've still sold millions of the damned things, and they are EVERYWHERE. Walk into any gamer hangout or computer store in America, and half the store will be X-Box console games. The other half will be Playstation and Wii (which, although up and coming, still hasn't displaced the Big Two), with a tiny little corner devoted to PC games. Sales figures of the boxes themselves are somewhat different: http://www.mercurynews.com/opinion/ci_6331086 "In the first five months of the year, Nintendo has walked away as the winner, selling 1.73 million Wiis in the United States, according to market researcher NPD Group. Microsoft has sold 1 million Xbox 360s and Sony has sold only 665,000 PS3s." And we wonder why the young (yuths) are not interested in flying? -- Matt Barrow Performance Homes, LLC. Cheyenne, WY |
#64
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Kyle Boatright wrote:
I think I spoke too soon. Another review of Lowrances product line doesn't show any XM products. It was Garmin's marine line that had XM. Sorry for the tease! I did the same thing but I know I was on the Lowrence site and I know I saw a marine unit with XM weather. Looking back now I can't find it. That is just strange. |
#65
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On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 04:27:48 -0400, Bob Noel wrote:
However, users generally don't have any objective quantitative measures for assessing which features are more useful or for comparing different capability implementations. Also, remember that "users" in a different context are "witnesses". Considering how reliable these are should provide some hint as to why some expertise is required to evaluation the collective of "opinions". - Andrew |
#66
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("Kyle Boatright" wrote)
As someone who was presumably taught the English language at an early age.. "you're"... (??) Glass houses and all that. Well now you ARE in Jay's wheelhouse (pilothouse). You know with that English major of his and whatnot. Paul-Mont ....and all that jazz (wheelhouse: from Dictionary.com) Danish: styrehus Dutch: stuurhut Estonian: kaptenisild Finnish: ohjaushytti French: timonerie German: das Ruderhaus Greek: t?µ?????a Hungarian: kormányosfülke Icelandic: st˙rishús Indonesian: ruang kemudi Italian: timoniera Latvian: sturesmaja Lithuanian: vairininko kabina Polish: sterówka Portuguese (Brazil): cabine de navegaçăo Portuguese (Portugal): casa do leme Romanian: timonerie Russian: ??????? ????? Slovak: kormidelníkova kabína Slovenian: kabina s krmilom Spanish: timonera, caseta del timón, puente de mando Swedish: styrhytt Turkish: dümen mahalli My spell checker is smoking.... |
#67
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The closest comparable consumer products with equivalent engineering
requirements that comes to my mind is the just-released iPhone and notebook/tablet computers. Hell, forget Iphone, pick any mobile phone released in the last 5 years, they're all running 120-400 mhz Arm Chips, which any decent programmer worth their salt should be able to make sing. I'm a mobile software engineer... And I can assure you that what you guys are seeing is scraping the bottom of the barrel in terms of what these boards are capable of- hell, we give our mainline game programmers three days to do the menus of their games, and the stuff they come up with wipes the floor with what I've seen from most handheld avionics. To me it just smacks of pure lack of will, they take the basic, designed-in-one-hour engineering interface and pass it off as a consumer product because they know they can. |
#68
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Ok, as a 25 year old "Senior" Mobile Framework engineer with a dozen
mobile games under my belt and an 200mhz ARM reference board I play around with at work, not to mention 2 years experience with GPS and Location services, I think I know something about this. And Jay is right on the money... seriously. Given capability of the hardware and the maturity of the embedded platforms at this point, the current crop of avionics (handheld and otherwise) isn't just substandard, its a downright embarrassment, and it smacks of _ZERO_ effort on the part of the current producers. I think you all underestimate the extent to which aviation has completely fallen off the radar of the younger generation. There is the sense that it is a dying market, and as a dying market, its not worth investing in, so the fact that a trivial investment is all that's needed to break into it doesn't matter. The young tech-dork generation is all chasing after youTube and Google and social networking and 'the next big thing'. That's how they'll (we'll) make our cool hundred million and join the ranks of the Sillicon Valley elite. A small side business in a 'dying' industry simply isn't what they're watching. BTW, the reason I have that embedded board is because of this very topic... Although I was focusing more on PMA instrumentation replacement, not handheld GPS's. |
#69
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On Jul 7, 12:18 am, "NW_Pilot"
wrote: "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... Now that my son is taking flight lessons, I'm letting him fly in (Read: Mary is relinquishing) the front seat more often. This plants him squarely in front of our panel-docked Garmin 496, the latest-and- greatest portable GPS from Garmin. We've flown behind this unit since OSH '06, and he has heard us discussing its quirks and limitations, but he's never had any first- hand experience programming it. Remember, the boy is 16 years old, and has almost literally grown up with a Playstation/X-Box/PC game controller in his hands. His thumbs are highly over-developed, from 10 million hours of video-game playing, and he is turning into an absolute whiz with computers. In short, he is an expert on all things that use graphics. After working the 496 for a few flights, with all of its bizarre hiccups (I.E.: The screen completely disappears when you slew the cursor across the screen) and horrible graphics (displayed on a postage-stamp-sized screen), his priceless comment was: "If Microsoft built the X-Box the way Garmin built the 496, they'd have sold about five of them..." And you know what? He's absolutely right. We pilots were so desperate for in-cockpit weather that we willingly paid $3000 (!) for a $250 dollar unit that performs worse than a video game. BTW: If you've never played with an X-Box, or a Sony Playstation game platform, this post won't make any sense to you -- which is precisely what Garmin was counting on. Go out and borrow your kids (or grand- kids) game unit for a couple of hours, and see what REAL graphics capability looks like. (And if you want to see how hand-held graphical displays *should* perform, borrow their PSP handheld Playstation unit.) I sure hope Garmin steps up to the plate, performance-wise, with their (much anticipated) new product at OSH... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Hummmm.... I think I said something like this in the 596 thread that a Korean knock off would be faster and better quality hahahahaha... Garmin is banking on a Name not quality. Some say they are the leader in GPS technology they may be but they will fail if they keep using poor quality parts and 5+ year old technology in their displays. I can hand solder SMT devices better then what they do on the inside of their devices. The CPU speed in my cell phone is faster then that of the G1000 no telling what they are using in the 496. So anyone have about $90K they want to toss to the Korea/HongKong to reverse engineer the 496 and then make it better and knock them off for only a few hundred dollars? Hell I could crack/dump their their os in a few days and would give me an excuse to get my SMT rework / device programming equipment out of the attic. I'm in... |
#70
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I'm a mobile software engineer... And I can assure you that what you
guys are seeing is scraping the bottom of the barrel in terms of what these boards are capable of- hell, we give our mainline game programmers three days to do the menus of their games, and the stuff they come up with wipes the floor with what I've seen from most handheld avionics. To me it just smacks of pure lack of will, they take the basic, designed-in-one-hour engineering interface and pass it off as a consumer product because they know they can. THANK YOU! I'm glad my son and I aren't the only ones who see this. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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