RoyalTS is a million times better than terminals. I think I paid $40 for it
Posts
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RE: Remotely control a Mac
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
@wrx7m said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
I have the UAP‑AC‑LITE and am powering it via the POE pass-through on the ER-X. You just use the POE injector that comes with the AP to power the ER-X, which powers the AP.
UAP-AC-LITE is 24v passive
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
@Dashrender said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Dashrender said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@johnhooks said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
will the Edge router X power my old unifi AC (POE+) or will it only do Passive POE meant for the upstream WISP AP?
You can use the Unifi Injector to power both.
No not according to the specs. It needs passive 24v injectors.
which part needs 24v? ERX or AP or both? the old Pro APs (non AC) used the lower voltage, don't know about the older AC APs.
The ERX uses 24v passive
And no the old Unifi AP pros did not use lower voltage. They used standard POE, the AC used POE+ and the standard models used 24v passive
Isn't POE less than 24 volts?
standard 802.3af is 48v
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
@Dashrender said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@johnhooks said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
will the Edge router X power my old unifi AC (POE+) or will it only do Passive POE meant for the upstream WISP AP?
You can use the Unifi Injector to power both.
No not according to the specs. It needs passive 24v injectors.
which part needs 24v? ERX or AP or both? the old Pro APs (non AC) used the lower voltage, don't know about the older AC APs.
The ERX uses 24v passive
And no the old Unifi AP pros did not use lower voltage. They used standard POE, the AC used POE+ and the standard models used 24v passive
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
@johnhooks said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
@Jason said in Ubiquiti EdgeRouters:
will the Edge router X power my old unifi AC (POE+) or will it only do Passive POE meant for the upstream WISP AP?
You can use the Unifi Injector to power both.
No not according to the specs. It needs passive 24v injectors.
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
Looks to be passive POE only.. Sad.
Was considering condensing my setup. I have a Edge Router Lite, and a SG-300 24 POE+ switch at home.
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RE: Ubiquiti EdgeRouters
will the Edge router X power my old unifi AC (POE+) or will it only do Passive POE meant for the upstream WISP AP?
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RE: Remotely control a Mac
@BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:
@Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:
@BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:
@aaronstuder said in Remotely control a Mac:
@BBigford If you know the right people the price is the same
I'm sure there are people just loading up VNC (free) and using it for business... we finally got all licensed compliant.
Just frustrating that Microsoft gives away their RDP client to Apple for free, but nothing that goes the other way for businesses to stay compliant.
There are free VNC tools, I would think some of the freebie VNC servers would work on macs and not just the apple built in server
There's Free, Personal (small scale business), and Enterprise (large scale business)... Free is for "individual, personal use", I'm guessing we wouldn't be allowed to use that because it's being used in a business setting.
It doesn't even have to have a wide range of functionality. I just need to be able to remotely connect and launch OSX Server (rarely).
Which ones are you referring too? Most VNC is free not just free for personal use..
I'm saying why does it have to me the native Mac one? Tight VNC etc are open source (not sure if they have a Mac version) but I'm sure there are ones for mac
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RE: Remotely control a Mac
@BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:
@aaronstuder said in Remotely control a Mac:
@BBigford If you know the right people the price is the same
I'm sure there are people just loading up VNC (free) and using it for business... we finally got all licensed compliant.
Just frustrating that Microsoft gives away their RDP client to Apple for free, but nothing that goes the other way for businesses to stay compliant.
There are free VNC tools, I would think some of the freebie VNC servers would work on macs and not just the apple built in server
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RE: 10" HDMI 1080P displays
@Dashrender said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@MattSpeller said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Dashrender said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@thwr said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Dashrender What exactly are you trying to accomplish?
my AV equipment is in a remote location to viewing area.
I want to put a monitor where the viewing equipment is so I can make changes, updates and see that the output is working without having to go back to the viewing room each time I make a change.
So this will be a temporary setup? Just to confirm everything is working?
I'm willing to buy a $100 mini monitor to leave in the AV rack permanently.
Look on Amazon or eBay for a Lilliput HDMI monitor should do what you need
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RE: 10" HDMI 1080P displays
When you are looking at the small HD displays that have lower than HD resolution ever single one of them have scalers in them for 1080p and 720p the are meant for professional video applications with field monitors. We do not use scalers between the source and them, the moms toes do it themselves..
There is so much bad information in this thread it's not even funny. This site is becoming another spiceworks.
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RE: Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC
@JaredBusch said in Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC:
@scottalanmiller said in Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC:
@JaredBusch said in Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC:
@scottalanmiller said in Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC:
@coliver said in Fibrant ISP/SIP Provider Salisbury NC:
Just for background - Fibrant is a municipal ISP that was setup by the City of Salisbury to fill in the gaps that other ISPs in the area refused to fill. They expanded from there and offer high speed services to the majority of the city.
but adding in SIP to services, that's where the problems tend to start. Being an ISP is good. Offering SIP is good. Putting the two together is generally bad. No
t always, of course, but pretty often.Just because an ISP offers sip does not mean they are a shit IST
Yup, which I pointed out. I leans that way, but doesn't mean that it is the case.
That isn't what your first response was though. Your first response was very narrow and specific.
Yep, correlation doesn't equal causation. The two aren't related at all.
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RE: 10" HDMI 1080P displays
You won't need a scaler these LCD monitors are meant for 1080p and 720p signals.
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RE: 10" HDMI 1080P displays
@Dashrender said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Jason said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Dashrender said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Jason said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
Interesting. anything to my question about the fact that the resolution is not really 1080p
There are ones that are: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search?atclk=Screen+Resolution_1920x1080&ci=1984&Ns=p_PRICE_2|0&N=4028759510+3810504340
You just didn't look enough.
lol, I'm not spending $400 on something I'll look at very rarely.
I was really looking for an answer to the question, I'm happy to run a lower res second monitor as long my output device doesn't whine about it.
I'm guessing no one has any experience with this.
What do you mean? They all do scaling internally. the resolution is about the resolution about the LCD itself. not the input those are for video camera and will all be mean for 1080p.
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RE: Home theater audio
@travisdh1 said in Home theater audio:
@RojoLoco said in Home theater audio:
@MattSpeller said in Home theater audio:
Also don't forget that wireless speakers will induce latency. Some amps can adjust for this, have a look in your manual
My logic was that an instrument wireless would have less latency...
Guess what? It's still horrible. If one band member want's a wireless in-ear monitor, they all have to have wireless monitors on the same broadcast system. Otherwise they get to hear what they're playing twice!
Nah, that's why we have latency adjustments on outputs you delay all the other wedges to match wireless
Same with using live effects like waves we delay the other inputs to match. It's very little latency on either for high end systems
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RE: Home theater audio
@RojoLoco said in Home theater audio:
I wonder if you could use a cheap instrument wireless system and a small amp near the rear speakers?
You'd need a speaker level to Line (or Instrument if the wireless system doesn't adjust) level converter you'll be converting the speaker level into heat..
Those speaker level to line level devices are usually for car audio and you will be disappointed with your results. If your amp can do passive unamplified outputs you can get around it though but that's not likely.
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RE: 10" HDMI 1080P displays
@Dashrender said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
@Jason said in 10" HDMI 1080P displays:
Interesting. anything to my question about the fact that the resolution is not really 1080p
There are ones that are: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search?atclk=Screen+Resolution_1920x1080&ci=1984&Ns=p_PRICE_2|0&N=4028759510+3810504340
You just didn't look enough.
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RE: Home theater audio
@Dashrender said in Home theater audio:
This assumes that the joists run the correct direction in my ceiling to pull a wire, honest I have no clue, but, if they go the same direction as the ones in the basement, then that's a non starter.
There are two tools there for a reason..
Also often times there is a spacer between ceiling joists and the drywall to allow for cabling without holes drilling into joists.
Normally ceiling joists and floor joists will be the same direction.
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RE: Home theater audio
@Dashrender said in Home theater audio:
Running wires would require running them into the basement, no access to the space between the main floor and the second floor.
There are ways..
http://www.amazon.com/Magnepull-XP1000-LC-Wire-Pulling-System/dp/B000YJB5WO
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Klein-Tools-Flexible-Drill-Bit-Kit-3-Piece-53721/203913339
No need to go in unfinished spaces. Also keep in mine if you cut a small access hole in drywall say 2x2 they are really easy to patch.