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On Jul 5, 12:47*am, bildan wrote:
On Jul 4, 12:58*pm, Mike wrote: Hey guys, after my first gliding (sorry, I'm English ![]() few months ago I'm dying to get into the sport, and I've got a couple more sessions lined up over summer. Anyways, amongst other things I'm a keen software developer and I've recently stumbled across Google's Android. For those of you who aren't familiar with what it is, it's an operating system designed to run on mobile phones - very similar (if not better) than the iPhone OS. I have found out that most phones have a full range of sensors (pitch, yaw, digital compass and GPS to name a few) and was thinking that Android would be the ideal platform for a small alternative instrument panel. Not having had much gliding experience I'm really not sure what to include. So my question is, as a glider (hang-gliding included) pilot, what sort of instruments do you regularly use or would find handy to have displayed. I was thinking something along the lines of a navigation system (relatively easy to implement) and basic flight instruments such as heading, altitude, airspeed etc. Please bare in mind that this is obviously no replacement for any of the instruments you already have and never will be, it's simply a small project that I intend for it to make things a bit easier/ accessible for the pilot. Would love to hear your feedback. Regards, Mike I'd encourage you to keep looking at the Android platform. *I don't know of one with the same 6DOF inertial measurement unit (IMU) as the iPhone but I'd bet one is coming if it doesn't exist. *An IMU offers the possibility of a considerable improvement in thermal centering aids and the possibly a fully inertial TE vario with zero gust sensitivity and instant response. GPS is very good at relatively long time scale navigation but an IMU is much better at very short time scales.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Maybe you should at this site as well: http://www.kflog.org/cumulus/ It is an open source development of a nav system running Maemo, another linux derivative. |
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