This version has an alternative way of setting the display
range for the main spectrum/waterfall. Click the frequency
scale.
Download and some more info at the bottom of this page:
http://www.sm5bsz.com/linuxdsp/linroot.htm
73
Leif / SM5BSZ
> It looks like all of my choppy audio issues are connected
> with the remote desktop program Logmein.
This seems to be a program that runs a Web server which would
make Linrad available to another computer that runs Internet Explorer
or some other browser. This must be extremely inefficient
(if I understood right)....
> I can monitor the audio remotely without the control of my
> remote desktop. (I can not see the Linrad screen, hihi).
> The audio does not chop until I start the remote desktop program..
> Linrad is fine and not at fault. I hope you did not waste time
> trying to figure all of this out.
Quite some time ago someone reported he could run Linrad on a
different machine under X11 in Linux by logging into it with
remote terminal. Now, that would not work with Perseus because
there is no drive routine for the Perseus hardware under Linux.
I think one can use a remote terminal also under Windows. One
can allow others to log into the computer via Internet and they
can then help with the computer configuration. I do not know if
it would be possible to run any application and whether sound
would be transmitted.
Did you try to give maximum priority (3=realtime) to Linrad?
That should allow Linrad to run at 100% CPU load while logmein
would have to use only what Linrad does not need. For that
to work you might have to set a low "Max DMA rate" to force
large buffers. You would then also have to set a large "Output
delay margin" so there is a large amount of data that may be
under processing and that would be transferred to the big
output buffer every time Linrad has grabbed the CPU.
SM0ERR has reported sucessful remote operation by sending the
wideband signal over the Internet. With the Perseus you would
have to transfer at least 96kHz*2*16bit = 3 Mbit/s and that
might be possible. I do not know in what way Mart controlled
the computer in which the transmitting Linrad program was running.
There seems to be many different solutions:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_remote_desktop_software
73
Leif / SM5BSZ
Under Windows with a Perseus attached, I use remote desktop with Icecast
and SimpleCast: http://www.spacialaudio.com/?page=simplecast
I don't use remote desktop to do the audio, since it can't do
compression to mp3 or ogg.
Works well enough - but the audio will cut out when I'm remote
desktopping in to change the frequency, but as soon as I close the RDP
session all is well. I use this with the Perseus software but I don't
see why it wouldn't work with Windows Linrad.
I'm still waiting for a real remote control daemon for the Perseus that
can compress audio to a frontend on a DSL connected remote machine.
Cheers
Alex