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Re: DMC-HD card blocks CEC commands

 

Hello!

Take a look at your Simpl Program. Open the card, go to Subslot1 Advanced and you will find serials for all CEC commands.

--- In Crestron@..., "dannymcla" <danny.mclaughlin@...> wrote:

I have a Lifesize codec and a Lifesize 10x camera, HDMI output from the camera feeding a DM8x8 switcher DMC-HD card. Then using the HDMI loop out of the card into the codec. The video signal is great, but no control over the camera when looping thru the card. Bypassing the DMC-HD card and feeding the camera directly into the codec restores control.

I am assuming the Lifesize codec controls the camera via CEC commands thru the HDMI signal path. Any idea how to unblock the CEC commands thru the DMC-HD?


Re: DMC-HD card blocks CEC commands

Raph Paf
 

if i remember all cec command are break out in dm switcher, you need to attached the corresponding signal name from your input to your ouput device.

look in the dm switcher symbol.

good luck

--- In Crestron@..., "dannymcla" <danny.mclaughlin@...> wrote:

I have a Lifesize codec and a Lifesize 10x camera, HDMI output from the camera feeding a DM8x8 switcher DMC-HD card. Then using the HDMI loop out of the card into the codec. The video signal is great, but no control over the camera when looping thru the card. Bypassing the DMC-HD card and feeding the camera directly into the codec restores control.

I am assuming the Lifesize codec controls the camera via CEC commands thru the HDMI signal path. Any idea how to unblock the CEC commands thru the DMC-HD?


DMC-HD card blocks CEC commands

dannymcla
 

I have a Lifesize codec and a Lifesize 10x camera, HDMI output from the camera feeding a DM8x8 switcher DMC-HD card. Then using the HDMI loop out of the card into the codec. The video signal is great, but no control over the camera when looping thru the card. Bypassing the DMC-HD card and feeding the camera directly into the codec restores control.

I am assuming the Lifesize codec controls the camera via CEC commands thru the HDMI signal path. Any idea how to unblock the CEC commands thru the DMC-HD?


Re: Security DVR

 

IC realtime has a decent ir controll its also 232
On Apr 3, 2012 11:05 AM, "Heath Volmer" <hvolmer@...> wrote:

**


I'm looking for a decently-controllable security DVR line. Doesn't need to
be RS232, but at least have a decent IR set. Mobile Pro-friendly streaming
would be great, but a decent iPad app might do. Mac browser compatibility a
must. Price range is probably not important.

Thanks, Heath

Heath Volmer
Digital Domain Systems
(303) 517-9714

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Security DVR

Heath Volmer
 

I'm looking for a decently-controllable security DVR line. Doesn't need to be RS232, but at least have a decent IR set. Mobile Pro-friendly streaming would be great, but a decent iPad app might do. Mac browser compatibility a must. Price range is probably not important.

Thanks, Heath



Heath Volmer
Digital Domain Systems
(303) 517-9714


Re: OT! (Completely!) - Wakeboarding System

 

Way Cool! That's a lot cheaper than a wake boat.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2012 at 10:55 AM, rickmcneely <rickmcneely@...> wrote:

**




First, thanks for the 'kick a$$'. It cost about $6000, including a few
mis-steps, not including the pond. 8k for the pond. If you think about it,
it's still cheaper than a decent ski-boat. I have had someone ask about
selling the software. I'm really not sure how to price such a thing. It
will either be sold or just released.

Rick


--- In Crestron@..., "erikm_101" <erikm101@...> wrote:

Kick A$$.

How much did that cost to build? Are you gonna sell it to water parks?

--- In Crestron@..., "rickmcneely" <rickmcneely@> wrote:

In the last couple of months, I have been involved in what I think is
a very cool programming project. My uncle Charlie built a wakeboarding
system in his back yard, and I wrote a control program (PC based) that
controls it. All of the parameters are adjustable on the fly. You can see
our preliminary results here:

Charlie Wakeboarding:


Overview:


View of Motor and USB components:


Additional benefit: You can hear my hillbilly voice on the video!


Re: OT! (Completely!) - Wakeboarding System

rickmcneely
 

First, thanks for the 'kick a$$'. It cost about $6000, including a few mis-steps, not including the pond. 8k for the pond. If you think about it, it's still cheaper than a decent ski-boat. I have had someone ask about selling the software. I'm really not sure how to price such a thing. It will either be sold or just released.

Rick

--- In Crestron@..., "erikm_101" <erikm101@...> wrote:

Kick A$$.

How much did that cost to build? Are you gonna sell it to water parks?

--- In Crestron@..., "rickmcneely" <rickmcneely@> wrote:

In the last couple of months, I have been involved in what I think is a very cool programming project. My uncle Charlie built a wakeboarding system in his back yard, and I wrote a control program (PC based) that controls it. All of the parameters are adjustable on the fly. You can see our preliminary results here:

Charlie Wakeboarding:


Overview:


View of Motor and USB components:


Additional benefit: You can hear my hillbilly voice on the video!


Re: OT! (Completely!) - Wakeboarding System

Heath Volmer
 

Now all it needs is the wake! ;-)

(maybe some underwater cables dragging a "boat" along in front...)

Cool

Heath Volmer
Digital Domain Systems
(303) 517-9714

On Apr 3, 2012, at 8:42 AM, rickmcneely wrote:

In the last couple of months, I have been involved in what I think is a very cool programming project. My uncle Charlie built a wakeboarding system in his back yard, and I wrote a control program (PC based) that controls it. All of the parameters are adjustable on the fly. You can see our preliminary results here:

Charlie Wakeboarding:


Overview:


View of Motor and USB components:


Additional benefit: You can hear my hillbilly voice on the video!



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Re: Dish Network Hopper2000

 

Logitech Harmony software has this in their database already, device is just called Hopper. Any chance you could pick one up cheap and learn the IR from harmony to Deal... Used to do this, got rid of remote, might pick a new one up.

--- In Crestron@..., "KimberLee Mcginnis" <k_mc@...> wrote:

Yes, this is a new box from EchoStar, . Whole new remote and interface. It's always something to screw things up. The setup says it can do both IR and UHF. No unit codes like the old ones. Just says IR enable and disable in the menu. I'll give them a call and see what they can do for us and let you all know. I'm sure I'm not the only one out there who will be needing the info soon.

--- In Crestron@..., Jon Spackman <fueler1@> wrote:

Sorry, just saw you said you already tried them.

If you press menu, menu on the dish remote. Does it have an IR address? Maybe default is not address 1. I have driver for 1,3,and,5 if that helps.

Jon

Sent from my iPad


Re: OT! (Completely!) - Wakeboarding System

erikm_101
 

Kick A$$.

How much did that cost to build? Are you gonna sell it to water parks?

--- In Crestron@..., "rickmcneely" <rickmcneely@...> wrote:

In the last couple of months, I have been involved in what I think is a very cool programming project. My uncle Charlie built a wakeboarding system in his back yard, and I wrote a control program (PC based) that controls it. All of the parameters are adjustable on the fly. You can see our preliminary results here:

Charlie Wakeboarding:


Overview:


View of Motor and USB components:


Additional benefit: You can hear my hillbilly voice on the video!


OT! (Completely!) - Wakeboarding System

rickmcneely
 

In the last couple of months, I have been involved in what I think is a very cool programming project. My uncle Charlie built a wakeboarding system in his back yard, and I wrote a control program (PC based) that controls it. All of the parameters are adjustable on the fly. You can see our preliminary results here:

Charlie Wakeboarding:


Overview:


View of Motor and USB components:


Additional benefit: You can hear my hillbilly voice on the video!


Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

Jeremy Weatherford
 

The other differentiation that's important to make is that while you
can't "send" an empty string over a 232 or TCP* connection (unless you
have a delimiter defined and consider that to be "empty"), empty
strings can and do exist in memory.

[*]You** can send an empty TCP packet, but it functions identically to
an ACK/Keepalive and doesn't send any info up to the application
layer, as no data was transmitted -- TCP is byte-oriented.

[**]Meaning the TCP/IP stack, not from SIMPL or SIMPL+.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2012 at 9:59 AM, Jeremy Weatherford <jweather@...> wrote:
Crestron doesn't use (or at least doesn't expose) C-style strings,
though, otherwise it would be awkward to deal with device protocols
containing &#92;x00. ?It's perfectly possible to have an empty string, and
easy to work with them in SIMPL+ (string = "" or len(string) = 0),
it's just a little trickier to deal with in SIMPL-land since it
doesn't "match" anything in an SIO.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2012 at 9:44 AM, rickmcneely <rickmcneely@...> wrote:


I don't know how you would search for nothing. ?Am I missing something? ?Probably.

A string is a string unless it is a string. ?A C style string is terminated with a &#92;x00. ?If there is nothing before the &#92;x00 then it is considered to be a zero-length string. ?Inserting a &#92;x00 in the middle of a C string would be exactly the same as changing the length.

Some strings (like windows OLE strings or 'The OTHER control system' strings) are actually a structure containing a character array and a length, or some variation. ?In strings like that, the length of the string is determined by the length property, and not by some marker byte like &#92;x00.

But usually, devices don't send either type of string. ?The control system just stores whatever is received in some type of string. ?Could be either of the above or some variation. ?Usually the controlled system delimits lines with some type of ETX and/or STX. ?Usually just the ETX and usually that is a carriage-return or carriage-return/line-feed. ?In that case, a line containing only the ETX would be considered empty.




------------------------------------



Check out the Files area for useful modules, documents, and drivers.

A contact list of Crestron dealers and programmers can be found in the Database area.
Yahoo! Groups Links




--
Jeremy Weatherford


--
Jeremy Weatherford


Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

Jeremy Weatherford
 

Crestron doesn't use (or at least doesn't expose) C-style strings,
though, otherwise it would be awkward to deal with device protocols
containing &#92;x00. It's perfectly possible to have an empty string, and
easy to work with them in SIMPL+ (string = "" or len(string) = 0),
it's just a little trickier to deal with in SIMPL-land since it
doesn't "match" anything in an SIO.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2012 at 9:44 AM, rickmcneely <rickmcneely@...> wrote:


I don't know how you would search for nothing. ?Am I missing something? ?Probably.

A string is a string unless it is a string. ?A C style string is terminated with a &#92;x00. ?If there is nothing before the &#92;x00 then it is considered to be a zero-length string. ?Inserting a &#92;x00 in the middle of a C string would be exactly the same as changing the length.

Some strings (like windows OLE strings or 'The OTHER control system' strings) are actually a structure containing a character array and a length, or some variation. ?In strings like that, the length of the string is determined by the length property, and not by some marker byte like &#92;x00.

But usually, devices don't send either type of string. ?The control system just stores whatever is received in some type of string. ?Could be either of the above or some variation. ?Usually the controlled system delimits lines with some type of ETX and/or STX. ?Usually just the ETX and usually that is a carriage-return or carriage-return/line-feed. ?In that case, a line containing only the ETX would be considered empty.




------------------------------------



Check out the Files area for useful modules, documents, and drivers.

A contact list of Crestron dealers and programmers can be found in the Database area.
Yahoo! Groups Links




--
Jeremy Weatherford


Re: iPad retina display with crestron mobile G

Jeremy Weatherford
 

The rendering issue is a result of "baking" text into images at the
native resolution of the old iPad, and then having them rescaled on
the new iPad. Apps that render text from font files have sharp text
as expected:

I'm curious whether Crestron Mobile Pro is actually using the full
resolution of an image sized for retina when the project is scaled
"normally". CommandFusion is designed to do this using image files
with @2x appended, indicating they are for retina displays. This
makes it easy to design a project to work on both devices, with
higher-resolution graphics used when available.

On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 1:30 PM, fabiodaubermann <fdaubermann@...> wrote:
I am curious if anybody here had a chance to play with the newest iPad and crestron mobile...

The new iPad has greater resolution, and after reading on the internet that some electronic magazines which publish for ipad had some issues with publications not rendering right on the new iPad made me think immediately of the crestron app.

Anybody with a new iPad out there?


Thanks!
Fabio



------------------------------------



Check out the Files area for useful modules, documents, and drivers.

A contact list of Crestron dealers and programmers can be found in the Database area.
Yahoo! Groups Links




--
Jeremy Weatherford


Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

Chip
 

If memory serves, every location designated as a string starts with a length byte that is typically "hidden" from us - so a "string with no length" still takes up a single byte of memory - the byte required to represent the lack of length. :)

- Chip

--- In Crestron@..., "lincster2010" <lincster2010@...> wrote:

A string is what resides in the RAM allocated to hold that string. If that RAM space has no data, it is an empty string.

--- In Crestron@..., "tres n3L" <tres@> wrote:

imho, there is no such thing as an "empty" string. all data has bytes.



From: Crestron@... [mailto:Crestron@...] On Behalf
Of Lincoln King-Cliby
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2012 4:32 PM
To: 'Crestron@...'
Subject: RE: [Crestron] Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question





Steve,

&#92;x00 is not the same as an empty string -- it's a string with one byte with
all bits set to 0.

(it's a case of "something" being "nothing" or "nothing" being "something"
:) )

As much as it strikes me as dirty-esque I think the best bet is a S+ module
that looks at the length of the string (e.g. IF(LEN(input$) = 0) )

Lincoln
--
Lincoln King-Cliby, CTS
Sr. Systems Architect
ControlWorks Consulting, LLC
V: 440.449.1100 x1107 F: 440.449.1106 I:
Crestron Authorized Independent Programmer

-----Original Message-----
From: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com>
[mailto:Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> ] On
Behalf Of highfidelityinc
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2012 4:05 PM
To: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Crestron] Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

Let me preface this by saying I have not tried this. But I think the
following work work.

1) An Serial to Analog symbol (OP103) with a parameter of 0200h. That would
convert every serial character to a sequence of analog equivalents. You
would then look for an analog zero on the output.

2) SIMPL+ solution. You would look for the &#92;x00 character in the input
buffer.

3) An ASCII Serial Decoder symbol (ASCIIDecode). It has an &#92;x00 output. But
it would require an SMV to hit the dial input in order to get a pulse on
this output. Per help, you need a SRAM symbol too. This would be the most
iffy solution as it is meant to interface to an ASCII Keypad symbol. But it
might work.

Steve

--- In Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> ,
"Heather Baiman" <heather@> wrote:

I feel like I should and or do know this yet can't get this right.



I'm looking to detect an empty string from a MMS-2 via a SIO. Double
quotes doesn't work, neither does &#92;x00.



In particular, I am looking for when the first browse line of text
coming from an MMS-2 is blank/empty. I want to enact other code when I
detect this.



When using their Rhapsody interface, if you employ a layout on a large
touchpanel that is able to show the transports, current song meta data
and the browse list full time (instead of subpaging it to death) after
making a final selection on the Rhapsody source, the MMS clears the
strings on the browse list. In my opinion, it looks like it did
something wrong as opposed to just keeping you on the browse page you
were actually browsing. I can make it repopulate by pressing the 'back'
button when I see the empty string come in.



How do I detect the emptiness?



Heather Baiman

heather@

Electronic Environments

247 W. 37th

New York, NY 10018

Phone (212)997-1110

Fax (212)997-0474





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
------------------------------------

*
****

Check out the Files area for useful modules, documents, and drivers.

A contact list of Crestron dealers and programmers can be found in the
Database area.
*
****Yahoo! Groups Links





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

rickmcneely
 

I don't know how you would search for nothing. Am I missing something? Probably.

A string is a string unless it is a string. A C style string is terminated with a &#92;x00. If there is nothing before the &#92;x00 then it is considered to be a zero-length string. Inserting a &#92;x00 in the middle of a C string would be exactly the same as changing the length.

Some strings (like windows OLE strings or 'The OTHER control system' strings) are actually a structure containing a character array and a length, or some variation. In strings like that, the length of the string is determined by the length property, and not by some marker byte like &#92;x00.

But usually, devices don't send either type of string. The control system just stores whatever is received in some type of string. Could be either of the above or some variation. Usually the controlled system delimits lines with some type of ETX and/or STX. Usually just the ETX and usually that is a carriage-return or carriage-return/line-feed. In that case, a line containing only the ETX would be considered empty.


Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

 

A string is what resides in the RAM allocated to hold that string. If that RAM space has no data, it is an empty string.

--- In Crestron@..., "tres n3L" <tres@...> wrote:

imho, there is no such thing as an "empty" string. all data has bytes.



From: Crestron@... [mailto:Crestron@...] On Behalf
Of Lincoln King-Cliby
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2012 4:32 PM
To: 'Crestron@...'
Subject: RE: [Crestron] Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question





Steve,

&#92;x00 is not the same as an empty string -- it's a string with one byte with
all bits set to 0.

(it's a case of "something" being "nothing" or "nothing" being "something"
:) )

As much as it strikes me as dirty-esque I think the best bet is a S+ module
that looks at the length of the string (e.g. IF(LEN(input$) = 0) )

Lincoln
--
Lincoln King-Cliby, CTS
Sr. Systems Architect
ControlWorks Consulting, LLC
V: 440.449.1100 x1107 F: 440.449.1106 I:
Crestron Authorized Independent Programmer

-----Original Message-----
From: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com>
[mailto:Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> ] On
Behalf Of highfidelityinc
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2012 4:05 PM
To: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Crestron] Re: Dumb Serial Empty String Question

Let me preface this by saying I have not tried this. But I think the
following work work.

1) An Serial to Analog symbol (OP103) with a parameter of 0200h. That would
convert every serial character to a sequence of analog equivalents. You
would then look for an analog zero on the output.

2) SIMPL+ solution. You would look for the &#92;x00 character in the input
buffer.

3) An ASCII Serial Decoder symbol (ASCIIDecode). It has an &#92;x00 output. But
it would require an SMV to hit the dial input in order to get a pulse on
this output. Per help, you need a SRAM symbol too. This would be the most
iffy solution as it is meant to interface to an ASCII Keypad symbol. But it
might work.

Steve

--- In Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> ,
"Heather Baiman" <heather@> wrote:

I feel like I should and or do know this yet can't get this right.



I'm looking to detect an empty string from a MMS-2 via a SIO. Double
quotes doesn't work, neither does &#92;x00.



In particular, I am looking for when the first browse line of text
coming from an MMS-2 is blank/empty. I want to enact other code when I
detect this.



When using their Rhapsody interface, if you employ a layout on a large
touchpanel that is able to show the transports, current song meta data
and the browse list full time (instead of subpaging it to death) after
making a final selection on the Rhapsody source, the MMS clears the
strings on the browse list. In my opinion, it looks like it did
something wrong as opposed to just keeping you on the browse page you
were actually browsing. I can make it repopulate by pressing the 'back'
button when I see the empty string come in.



How do I detect the emptiness?



Heather Baiman

heather@

Electronic Environments

247 W. 37th

New York, NY 10018

Phone (212)997-1110

Fax (212)997-0474






------------------------------------

*
****

Check out the Files area for useful modules, documents, and drivers.

A contact list of Crestron dealers and programmers can be found in the
Database area.
*
****Yahoo! Groups Links





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Re: Loewe Sound Projector

 

Isn't it a part of the Loewe TV? If so Loewe_LCD_Demo_Program.zip from the file section could help You.

--- In Crestron@..., "Miitch" <mitchell@...> wrote:

Does any one know the protocol for the loewe sound projector or the very least the discreet ir codes

Thanks In advance


Re: I'm Loosing It...

 

That is true.

Sorry I sometimes forget that companies like Crestron are Worldwide.



Lee



From: Crestron@... [mailto:Crestron@...] On Behalf Of Marc-Etienne Huneau
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2012 1:58 AM
To: Crestron@...
Subject: Re: [Crestron] Re: I'm Loosing It...





433 is the only authorized frequency in many countries
--
Marc-Etienne HUNEAU

? 06.615.516.90

Le 3 avr. 2012 ¨¤ 04:35, <ke4vsk@... <mailto:ke4vsk%40sbcglobal.net> > a ¨¦crit :

Hello All

This could be a common problem, the CNRFGWA operates on 433.92 Mhz.

This frequency is right in the middle of the of the 440 ham radio band that

covers from 420.0 Mhz. to 450.0 Mhz. I live a ? mile from our main Weather

Repeater, I had to change one of our remote receive link frequencies that

was on 434.0 Mhz. because it was interfering with my CNRFGWA.

The 420 to 450 Mhz. band is also shared with some First Responder agencies
like

Police, fire, ambulance. Mostly in rural areas.

I was really surprised that Crestron had used the 433.92 Mhz. frequency.

I guess that is why they came out with the CNRFGWA-418 that operates at 418
Mhz.

so it would have less interference.

Lee

From: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> [mailto:Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> ] On Behalf
Of silviacity
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 11:56 AM
To: Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Crestron] Re: I'm Loosing It...

Apologies for bumping an old thread, hopefully my experience can help
someone else.

i had a similar problem with an RTI, CNRFGWA and Pro2. Worked fine for a
long time, then 2 days ago, all 3 CNRFGWA lights on, all the time. Swapped
another CNRFGWA, same problem, all lights on.

Checked code, cabling...

Nothing I tried fixed the problem.

I remembered I also had FOB troubles with my car alarm that afternoon, which
suggested interference of some sort.

Unfortunately, returning home the next day, the car alarm FOB worked fine,
and the CNRFGWA activity LED was off.

The system worked exactly as it had before the problem arose.

I figure one of the neighbours has a ham radio or something like that, and
its just flooding the 433mhz band and the CNRFGWA is picking up on it and
freaking out.

Ill update this if it happens again, and I can figure out the source of
interference.

(as a note, i live in a big house on a big section in the burbs, its not an
inner city apartment)

Dan.

--- In Crestron@... <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> <mailto:Crestron%40yahoogroups.com> , Simon
Cope <sjcope@...> wrote:

Yup. Your gateway is screwed. I used to see this reasonably frequently a
few years back - you'll need to send the GW back for repair/replacement.

Simon C

2010/1/21 Lincoln King-Cliby <lincoln@...>



My system at home: I replaced a C2N-CBD with a CNX-BF12. Existing wire,
didn't even change the Phoenix connectors. Now all of a sudden the
ML-500/600s on the CNRFGWA-418 stop chatting.

Disconnect CNX-BF12 Cresnet at the CNT-BLOCK end of the cable... no
change.
Even with an ML-500 at 6", 18", and 3'.

Take antenna off CNRFGWA-418 and the ML-500 works within about 3' of the
gateway. Put antenna back on, goes back to not working.

An interesting observation is that the "SIGNAL" LED on the 433 CNRFGWA
right next to the -418 is clearly illuminated with I hit any button; the
"SIGNAL" LED on the -418 only flashes when I take the antenna off or
physically touch the ML-500 to the -418's antenna (in that case, though,
even though the signal usually LED comes on nothing seems to happen)

Making me scratch my head even more: Using Superdebugger is showing me
"something" being received by the gateway, but that's not triggering the
logic associated with the press in the program

E.g. press and release "Prev Ch" on the remote that should be RFID 20
<01/21/2010 14:17:03>CRX:Slot-01.ID-73 :1 Way TX ID:6F Join:33 Value:1
<01/21/2010 14:17:03>CRX:Slot-01.ID-73 :1 Way TX ID:00 Join:0 Value:0

Press and release softkey 10 for group 1
<01/21/2010 14:19:01>CRX:Slot-01.ID-73 :1 Way TX ID:49 Join:34 Value:1
<01/21/2010 14:19:01>CRX:Slot-01.ID-73 :1 Way TX ID:00 Join:0 Value:0

Any ideas?

Lincoln

--

Lincoln King-Cliby, CTS
Applications Engineer
ControlWorks Consulting, LLC

V: 440.449.1100 x1107 F: 440.449.1106 I:
Crestron Authorized Independent Programmer





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2012.0.1913 / Virus Database: 2114/4902 - Release Date: 03/29/12







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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
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Re: 16 bit wav to 8 bit wav Converter

slip.cougan
 

You can use Windows Sound recorder.
Simply open the file in Sound Rec and Save As...
In the Save as dialog hit Format to change the file format options.
Just remember to save as a different file if you want to keep the original.

g

--- In Crestron@..., "dbrichardson_bham" <davidrichardson1163@...> wrote:

Anyone have any software converters in mind or one that records in '8 bit wav'.?
Thanks
David