On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:40 PM, Klaus Schmidinger
wrote:
> It's a real pitty that the DVB drivers don't provide a standardized way of
> getting signal strength and quality. They all deliver some bogus values
> in various different ranges, which are pretty useless to applications.
This very subjec
Reading the Allwinner A10 thread made me think. Surely Ouya has great
potential as a cheap, low power media client.
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On 04.12.2012 20:35, cedric.dew...@telfort.nl wrote:
Hi All,
I use an USB DVB-T receiver. This works ok, but the snr meter at the bottom
of the screen is never filled more than a few pixels, no matter how good
the signal is. The problem with this receiver is that the snr figure never
goes above
Hi All,
I use an USB DVB-T receiver. This works ok, but the snr meter at the bottom
of the screen is never filled more than a few pixels, no matter how good
the signal is. The problem with this receiver is that the snr figure never
goes above 0x00d0. Is there a way to adjust the scaling of the sig
On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:34 AM, Marx wrote:
>> uses between 80-150W of power. Much heat and noise, and cost :-).
>> Therefore
>> I was looking for a more power-eficient system.
>
> You can buy Celeron G540 or similair on 1150 platform cheaply. It is energy
> efficient and run everything.
Sorry, b
Am 04.12.2012 10:34, schrieb Marx:
On 03.12.2012 10:10, cedric.dew...@telfort.nl wrote:
Hi All,
I now have a standard PC running arch linux and VDR. This works ok,
but it
uses between 80-150W of power. Much heat and noise, and cost :-).
Therefore
I was looking for a more power-eficient syste
On 03.12.2012 10:10, cedric.dew...@telfort.nl wrote:
Hi All,
I now have a standard PC running arch linux and VDR. This works ok, but it
uses between 80-150W of power. Much heat and noise, and cost :-). Therefore
I was looking for a more power-eficient system.
You can buy Celeron G540 or similair