Oliver Schinagl writes:
 > On 27-11-12 10:33, Ralph Metzler wrote:
 > > Oliver Schinagl writes:
 > >   > > I'm interested for such information. (I'm looking also for good well 
 > > supported DVB-S2 device to target multiple satellite)
 > >   > >
 > >   > > I've a question for you Olivier. I don't know that brand. Why going 
 > > to 1 dualtuner board and the octopus. In the same brand you can also use 
 > > the Cine S2 that could eventually be expended with a dualtuner board for 
 > > example. What are the limitation?
 > >   >  From what I know, is that the hardware is nearly identical on both 
 > > setups.
 > >   >
 > >   > The Cine S2 is an octopus with only 2 connectors (which allows 4 extra
 > >   > tuners) and has 2 onboard tuners, so 6 tuners maximum.
 > >   >
 > >   > The Octopus is ONLY the bridge chip (in FPGA form strangly in the 
 > > latest
 > >   > revisions, was the nGene before, driver is the same so maybe they got
 > >   > some IP from micronas to put in the FPGA due to performance/scaling
 > >   > issues?) but has 4 connectors for expansion cards. So you can connect 8
 > >
 > > Micronas has nothing to do with the new bridge. nGene is no longer in 
 > > production
 > > and it also lacked inputs and outputs to support more tuners/CIs.\
 > Well the new FPGA based design uses the nGene driver, so it at the very 

No it does not. It uses the ddbridge driver.


 > least is compatible on an API front. It would sound somewhat reasonable 
 > that either they re-implemented part of the chip or got some secret IP 
 > from micronas ;)

No, it has nothing to do with Micronas.


 > 
 > In any case, there is an FPGA on the board that behaves 'like' the nGene :)

No, it does not.

I do not know how you get this idea!?!?!

ddbridge is a completely different driver. 


Regards,
Ralph

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