Could you add a webcam to the remote PC, and point it at the
devices, so you can view them remotely? You could also set up a
Raspberry Pi and camera, and use that for viewing.
--
Paul
MW7PAJ
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My QDX is generally "remote" in my attic at my main QTH,
running off a laptop up there, 30 feet feet from where I'll sit
and "operate." I like the QDX for remote digital work, because
there's no audio routing involved, no other software needed to
operate, and I don't need huge bandwidth if I remote desktop
in.?
BUT, I have run into situations at home where I've
accidentally bumped a slider in WJST-X....and eventually figured
out I wasn't transmitting even though WJST-X seems to show that
I am. I go up to the attic and then can see the LED status
indicator and realize there's something wrong with the audio.?
? ? ?I'm looking at putting 2 or 3 QDXs to the same computer
at my 2nd QTH eventually, and have realized this could be an
occasional issue there, as I'll want to remote operate from
home. From what I can tell, there's no way through Putty or any
other native way to "see" the status LED (or read the status)
via a computer... I have low bandwidth at my cabin, upload speed
is slow there (600 kbps), so a camera with video is out of the
question. So I'm curious as to how you think one could most
easily "remote view" the status LED on a QDX or 2 without an
insane amount of complexity??
Phototransistors into Arduino inputs? Somehow monitor the
current of the LED, but fast enough to see what it's doing? (as
in, need the resolution and speed to "Read" flashes vs the 1hz
sine wave, etc) Of course this isn't an everyday need, so if
it's just ridiculous to do so, I'll skip it. But was thinking
there may be a simpler way than what I'm coming up with.?
Curious as to what others think, as this is not an area of my
expertise.?
-Nate
N8BTR