Re: LZ: Ti-H:RF Link for chatting.
[Prev][Next][Index][Thread]
At 07:13 AM 11/4/96 +0100, you wrote:
>Calc1 Transmit: 40 MHz ; Recieve 60 MHz
>Calc2 Transmit: 60 MHz ; Recieve 40 MHz
That should work just dandily. As long as they correspond to each other.
>My solution would be a switch to exchange the frequencies on one of the
>calculators, that would bring us to the first example. If anybody has a
>better idea, please tell me so.
That sounds just fine. You could have a small toggle swith or whatever to
change between "Channel" 1 or 2.
>This link could of course only be used in pairs.
Why? Why couldn't you have one transmitter and a million receievers. As
long as the frequencies match for sending and receieving shouldn't one box
be able to talk to a bunch of boxes... kinda like the transmitter is the
radio station and everyone else is the little radio in their car? I am
slightly electrical illiterate, but I don't see why only two people can chat.
Ben
>PS: Sorry about RT, I was thinking radio transfer. It should have been RF
>
> Hope anybody cares to help me, Laurits <CSN@dk-online.dk>
>
>----------
>> From: C.J. Oster <cjo@pobox.com>
>> To: list-zshell@lists.ticalc.org
>> Subject: Re: LZ: Ti-H:RT Link for chatting.
>> Date: 4. november 1996 04:18
>>
>> > Be able to send all the characters on the Ti-85 in a quick and easy
>way.
>> > It should only send on the red linkwire and only recieve on the white
>>
>> Problem, if I send on my white wire, you'll get it on you're white wire.
>> If both of our calcs are sitting here transmitting on the same wire, and
>> waiting for data on the wire that neither one of us are tranmitting on,
>> nothing will happen. However, you have an idea. The ti link is
>esentially
>> sterio sound right? But modems work on mono telephone lines...does
>anybody
>> see my point? If my calc transmitts on the white wire, and your calc
>> listens on the white wire, then what sould be the problem? We only really
>> need to use one of the lines.
>>
>> -C.J.-
>>
>>
>>
>> ********************************************************************
>> Unsolicited commercial e-mail to the poster of this message
>> will be proofread at $70/hr, minimum charge $150. Submission
>> of such e-mail to this address will suffice as contractual assent
>> to the said charging schedule.
>> ********************************************************************
>>
>>
>>
>
>
References: