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− | <b>November 18, 2011 ( | + | <b>November 18, 2011 (3 hours):</b> |
− | Attended weekly meeting. Due to my lack of success with the webcam feed, I borrowed Dr. Johnson's webcam to try it out. When I tried Cheese, it showed garbage but it at least showed something. I installed VLC and tried out some things. Easiest way I found to find the camera device was to ls in /dev before and after to find out the videoX that it was. I did this with the webcam and found it was /dev/video4, so I ran 'vlc v4l2:///dev/video4 (equivalent to choosing the capture device in the GUI) and the feed worked. The feed did glitch every so often.<br><br> | + | Attended weekly meeting. Due to my lack of success with the webcam feed, I borrowed Dr. Johnson's webcam to try it out. When I tried Cheese, it showed garbage but it at least showed something. I installed VLC and tried out some things. Easiest way I found to find the camera device was to ls in /dev before and after to find out the videoX that it was. I did this with the webcam and found it was /dev/video4, so I ran 'vlc v4l2:///dev/video4 (equivalent to choosing the capture device in the GUI) and the feed worked. The feed did glitch every so often.<br>[[Image:Webcam_works.jpg|400px|thumb|left]]<br> |
<br> | <br> | ||
Since this worked, I decided to give up on Cheese and try out VLC for the camera provided by Dr. Swabey. It did show feed, but would glitch and freeze for 30+ seconds often - obviously worthless. After consulting and working with Dr. Swabey who was kind enough to take a look at it, he found that something is not right with the graphics drivers which was causing even just the monitor display to take 20% of the CPU processing power. I tried to play some test *.mpg videos in VLC which didn't even play. Something is obviously wrong. At least I made some progress. | Since this worked, I decided to give up on Cheese and try out VLC for the camera provided by Dr. Swabey. It did show feed, but would glitch and freeze for 30+ seconds often - obviously worthless. After consulting and working with Dr. Swabey who was kind enough to take a look at it, he found that something is not right with the graphics drivers which was causing even just the monitor display to take 20% of the CPU processing power. I tried to play some test *.mpg videos in VLC which didn't even play. Something is obviously wrong. At least I made some progress. |
Revision as of 17:34, 18 November 2011
Contents
Jason Holmes - Design Notebook
Week of Sept. 19 |
September 21, 2011 (1.5 hours):
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September 22, 2011 (20 minutes):
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September 23, 2011 (1 hour):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Obtained usernames for HKUST members
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Week of Sept. 26 |
September 27, 2011 (45 minutes):
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September 27, 2011 (30 minutes):
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September 28, 2011 (1 hour):
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September 29, 2011 (45 minutes):
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September 30, 2011 (1.5 hour):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Completed preliminary block diagram layout of system. Decided on potential processor family.
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Week of Oct. 3 |
October 6, 2011 (2 hours):
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October 7, 2011 (1 hour):
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October 7, 2011 (1.5 hours):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Finished poster for VIP poster session
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Week of Oct. 10 |
October 11, 2011 (30 minutes):
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October 13, 2011 (1 hour):
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October 14, 2011 (1.5 hours):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Decided on a development board to begin prototyping.
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Week of Oct. 17 |
October 17, 2011 (30 minutes):
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October 17, 2011 (1 hour):
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October 18, 2011 (3 hours):
IP Camera:TRENDnet TV-IP110WN Wireless N Internet Camera
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October 19, 2011 (2 hours):
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October 20, 2011 (1 hour):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments:
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Week of Oct. 24 |
October 25, 2011 (3.2 hours):
(640 x 480 pixels) X (2 bytes per pixel) = 614,400 bytes per frame All of the CMOS cameras output in a RGB format or similar - raw image data. For most cameras, this is 16 bits per pixel. Without doing our own compression, this image data would be impossible to send wirelessly. There is a library for C to convert RGB data to JPEG format, which then possibly be converted to MJPEG on the controller side. This could possibly be used on-board, but the speed would have to be tested.
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October 28, 2011 (1.5 hours):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments:
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Week of Oct. 31 |
November 1, 2011 (4.5 hours):
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November 3, 2011 (7 hours):
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November 3, 2011 (1.5 hours):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Received tanks
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Week of Nov. 7 |
November 8, 2011 (3 hours):
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November 9, 2011 (3 hours):
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November 10, 2011 (2 hours):
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November 11, 2011 (2 hours):
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WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments: Completed design review
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Week of Nov. 14 |
WEEK SUMMARY: Accomplishments:
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