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Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
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Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 01:20:05 -0400, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 03:58:07 -0000, wrote: That's part of it no doubt, but it really is difficult to make a piece of electronics like that both waterproof and somewhat shock proof. I don't view the price as a big obstacle if it actually works. Compare it to the price of a Furuno 10 inch display. Have you considered a tablet PC? Some of them are mil-spec. Don't know much about them, any that you'd recommend ? Sorry, no recommendations. I just found the remote LCD interesting. So, I did a little Googling. There seem to be quite a few weather resistant, or mil-spec Point of Sale, touch screens, but I couldn't find any wireless ones. This site has submersible and mil-spec touch screens that might give you some ideas. http://www.vartechsystems.com/produc...technology.asp The table PC just came from the searching. It would have all the capabilities of a display, plus would be, in itself, a PC. There are mil- spec or weather resistant ones, and wireless capability is common. |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
Wayne.B wrote:
On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 21:25:52 -0400, Jack Erbes wrote: I don't have any experience with that one but it looks like it may have something in common with the Panasonic Toughbook Wireless Displays. Yes, I think that's it: http://tinyurl.com/ycqf99 I already have an older Panasonic Toughbook laptop and it's a good unit, surviving several salt water showers and one 3 ft drop. With a remote display I could leave the laptop down below in a safer environment or even run a more powerful desktop box. Big enough to see, and bright enough to read, that looks like a much better choice, there are still a couple of gotchas involved. 1 it's still only rated moisture resistant. Maybe it will survive spray - maybe not. AND 10 hours on a set of batteries. |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 03:07:48 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote: http://www.vartechsystems.com/produc...technology.asp The table PC just came from the searching. It would have all the capabilities of a display, plus would be, in itself, a PC. There are mil- spec or weather resistant ones, and wireless capability is common. On of the features of the Panasonic wireless touch screen that looks valuable is the ability to dim the screen to a low level. That is really important at night and I have yet to find a laptop display with sufficient dimming capability. I have to keep the laptop cover closed much of the time to preserve night vision. |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Mar 22, 11:49*am, HK wrote:
wrote: "Wayne.B" wrote in message .. . Every once in awhile something interesting shows up in my inbox buried under all of the other advertisements. *Yesterday I received this one: http://tinyurl.com/yrl8bb It purports to be a wireless, waterproof, touch sensitive screen for remote control and display of a PC. *It looks like it might be particularly useful for the cockpit of sailboats or on small power boats. *Apparently it is battery operated. Anyone have any experience with something like this? I have no connection with the product or vendor. Pricy for what it is. I wonder about it's viewability in sunlight. If you need to build a sunshade for it, you might just go ahead and build a water resistant enclosure and throw a laptop into it.Very short battery life which is understandable. There may be a practical application, but I can't think of any. I spoke too soon. I just thought of something. How about reading rec.boats while taking a shower. Kidding of course. Well, that would be a change from your usual habit of reading rec.boats and taking a dump.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - What a refined and cultured statement, Harry..... |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Mar 22, 1:48*pm, HK wrote:
wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... wrote: "Wayne.B" wrote in message om... Every once in awhile something interesting shows up in my inbox buried under all of the other advertisements. *Yesterday I received this one: http://tinyurl.com/yrl8bb It purports to be a wireless, waterproof, touch sensitive screen for remote control and display of a PC. *It looks like it might be particularly useful for the cockpit of sailboats or on small power boats. *Apparently it is battery operated. Anyone have any experience with something like this? I have no connection with the product or vendor. Pricy for what it is. I wonder about it's viewability in sunlight. If you need to build a sunshade for it, you might just go ahead and build a water resistant enclosure and throw a laptop into it.Very short battery life which is understandable. There may be a practical application, but I can't think of any. I spoke too soon. I just thought of something. How about reading rec.boats while taking a shower. Kidding of course. Well, that would be a change from your usual habit of reading rec.boats and taking a dump. I can dump on you some more if that's what you want. Please...you're barely an amateur. I'll try harder. Practice makes perfect. Follow Reggie's example. Offer nothing of value, but insult everyone else and what they've done, do, own, et cetera.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There's the pot calling the kettle black....... |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 08:34:04 -0400, Jack Erbes
wrote: When you tot up the cost of a Toughbook laptop and one of the wireless displays, you are getting into the cost range of one of the better marine grade systems like the Raymarines. Yes. I already have a pretty good Furuno system integrated into a 10 inch display with excellent daytime brightness and good night time dimming. I use a laptop PC as a back up chart plotter because I prefer the look of raster charts when in unfamiliar areas, and also because the Maptech software has superior route planning and tracking. A remote, portable, weather proof display would allow me to keep the laptop in a dry secure location at the lower helm, and also might be useful on a small runabout. |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 08:34:04 -0400, Jack Erbes
wrote: you'll find that those will intrude on your night vision some even at the dimmest settings that lets them be useful. Has next to nothing to do with night vision. Same thing is true in broad daylight. When you have a relatively bright light shining directly into your eyes it is more difficult to see dimmer objects. Regardless of the actual ammount of light involved. It takes as much as 45 minutes in close to complete darkness to get full night vision. Ask any astronomer. Casady |
Wireless and Waterproof Remote PC screen
On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 15:12:44 -0600, in message
cavelamb himself wrote: Capt. JG wrote: " wrote in message ... "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... Every once in awhile something interesting shows up in my inbox buried under all of the other advertisements. Yesterday I received this one: http://tinyurl.com/yrl8bb It purports to be a wireless, waterproof, touch sensitive screen for remote control and display of a PC. It looks like it might be particularly useful for the cockpit of sailboats or on small power boats. Apparently it is battery operated. Anyone have any experience with something like this? I have no connection with the product or vendor. Pricy for what it is. I wonder about it's viewability in sunlight. If you need to build a sunshade for it, you might just go ahead and build a water resistant enclosure and throw a laptop into it.Very short battery life which is understandable. There may be a practical application, but I can't think of any. I spoke too soon. I just thought of something. How about reading rec.boats while taking a shower. Kidding of course. I agree it's pricey, but the practical apps would include chart-reading and general nav issues? FWIW, I think it's too small for that... My NAVMAN chartplotter has a 5" screen that is large enough to be very useful. It was about half the price of this display and stands alone with a much lower current draw. (less than 1 amp vs 6 or 7 amps to run my notebook) Still, I am intrigued by the product and hope it will come down in price. It's right up there now with similar sized Raymarine displays. Ryk |
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