Posts by mrgmx

    Nsharma,


    For Vix


    Cams can be configured using Softcam Manager! (This should be available in extensions shortcut! > Press Blue button on Remote and a panel should flick up with softcam manager!


    Select the Cam you want from there.....when switching Cams ensure that only one is active and the other disabled - can cause problems!


    Do whatever you feel is easier....however if you copy ipk files to /tmp file on receiver you should see them in Setup > Vix > Manage local Extensions (They should auto show there?)


    Any Enigma2 add-on should be ok in theory however some are image specific e.t.c!


    TSPANEL is a must and most addons on there are separated into Image/Receiver sections!


    just a few for you to look at!


    Tspanel
    WebRadiofs
    Youtube
    1Channel
    Filebrowser
    MediaPlayer
    CrossEpg


    Have Fun!

    Hi Seamouse,


    I Know the feeling mate....so much info you start getting lost in it all!


    If i can help on this issue i will......my advice is as follows!


    When you say Red Buttons do you mean Interactive Services either *** or normal Tv! I think using CS these services are unavailable?


    As you want to share more than 1 card (***, Polish and *** IT) its best to look into a server!


    All you need is a basic PC or Lappy! Nothing Special? Anything you can get your hands on? And old one?


    On the Server you need the following!


    OS (Debian,Ubuntu,ClearOs)
    Oscam (Read Card and/or Share)
    Cccam (to Share lines)


    Install Linux OS Debian or Ubuntu using the scripts on the Forum....there pretty easy!


    In these scripts they should install Oscam and/or Cccam automatically, so after these a standard server should be setup!


    Then depending on the Cards you want to share you will need an appropriate number of card readers (smargo or Omnikey) and them setup


    There are Config info for most cards on the forum so grab them an edit/ammend to your settings!


    That will have you server setup and ready to create and share lines to all the users you suggest!


    Not sure whether you could do it all through your box! But with the amount of cards it may be easier with the Server!




    LINKS
    Server Setup
    http://linuxsat-support.com/li…l-package-debian-6-a.html


    http://linuxsat-support.com/li…-installation-ubuntu.html


    Configs


    Oscam Configs for all packages




    You probably won't get it all setup in one hit...but decide which avenue you want to go down.....if its the server get that setup...if you need any help Post Back!


    Have Fun....it will be worth it lol

    Yeah i think there has been an update....Alibaba posted the other day!


    Probably why i use Mgcamd...but never realised why i choose it lol!! Cheers!


    :thumbsup:

    Are you sure you installed ok? Have you rebooted?


    Should be in Plugins or if your lucky lol on the Menu!

    Or Menu - System - Audio/Language (Look for ac3 settings can't remember off hand)



    set AC3 to Yes
    Prefer Audio to NO



    and Reboot!





    Give that a try!
    Doing it Caz's way never worked for me....always reset itself when restarted e.t.c lol



    Arrrghhh Muso beat me to it lol


    :muso:

    Ohh i need this browser plugin then arrrggghhhh though you were gonna say some special image lol!


    If you get a minute can you zip the Browser plugin folder and its contents from your Ultimo (should be in usr/lib/enigma2/plugins) and PM or post please for me to tinker with lol


    No rush lol


    :mrgmx:

    I think your slowly heading towards the answer you don't want to hear mate! :62:


    The A Team lol have offered a lot of advice and if they don't crack it i think its a case of what Mutz Nutz said 'return to whomever you brought'


    I know you said there were difficulties in doing this but apart from looking good there maybe no other option! Sorry Pal

    Media Blackout - They Control the Media!
    People (Taxpayers subsidising) - They Control the People!


    Uproar or Not there products will sell....its not the Tax wrongdoings, Cheap Labour, Sponsor Deals e.t.c that should stop that, its the Crap they put in there products but that's another story!


    Although i will always support a cause with people that want to stand up e.t.c i do wish that this support was directed at other Causes or the Main Cause - Governements, Financiers and the CONTROLLERS
    or even more at home Fathers for Justice, Libor Rates, PPI and Bank Charges (That we havent heard about), High Fuel Costs, Support for the Family, Youth Culture, Problem Families the list goes on and on! and on!



    Good Post though lol the Heat be effecting me sorry!


    :thumbsup:

    You could have a look at thread below!


    That seems like the last stable and confirmed build (anything Ali posts is normally tried and tested)


    link here http://linuxsat-support.com/op…passion-03-02-2012-a.html


    or this one


    http://linuxsat-support.com/op…omend-s9-s10-s11-s12.html



    This apparently has fix in it but unless someone confirms its ok i would hold fire or do a backup first! (which should be done anyway lol)


    http://linuxsat-support.com/op…-cccam-2-2-1-install.html



    But all should work on your box (certainly 1st 2 links will)

    Well it must be the box then mate!


    If your connected to Net - Got Sat feed - Got a live line it can only be the box!


    You could try flashing with latest firmware to see if that puts it right openboxs16 firmware
    but this is one of the esaiest boxes to connect with so if your sure eveything else is ticked it may be the box im afraid:(


    Did you try putting line in manually though manage config files? as opposed to USB?


    If yes and no joy try re-flashing box...all i can suggest before sending it back to supplier!


    PandaBoard ES

    Like the Pi but with a bit more grunt under the hood and a higher price tag, the $180 PandaBoard ES is suited to both PC user and developer.
    The diminutive board is based on an open-source hardware design, and can run several flavours of Linux, such as Ubuntu and the Android OS.
    Support for a range of add-on boards allows the device to drive motors, run sensors and power LEDs, or anything else an electronics or robotics enthusiast might want to do.
    Among other things, PandaBoards have been used as media centres streaming 1080p, as control units for robots, as a wearable computer, to run a gesture-control interface, and as a general-purpose Android dev tool.

    Specs

    Board: Core Logic OMAP4460 system on a chip.
    Processor: 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor.
    Graphics: Full HD 1080p multi-standard video encode-decode.Imagination Technologies' POWERVR SGX540 graphics core supporting APIs including OpenGL ES v2.0, OpenGL ES v1.1, OpenVG v1.1 and EGL v1.3.
    Video/Audio: HDMI v1.3, DVI-D Connector, LCD expansion header, DSI support. 3.5mm audio in and out, HDMI audio out, stereo audio input support.
    Memory: 1GB DDR2 RAM.
    Storage: Full-size SD-MMC card cage with support for high-speed and high-capacity SD cards.
    Connectivity: 10/100 Ethernet, wireless connectivity 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth v2.1 + EDR based on WiLink 6.0.Three USB 2.0 ports - one on the go, two host.
    Expansion: General-purpose expansion header - I2C, GPMC, USB, MMC, DSS, ETM - camera expansion header, LCD signal expansion using a single set of resistor banks.
    Debug: JTAG, UART/RS-232.
    Other: Two configurable status LEDs, one GPIO button, sys-boot switch to boot from number of sources.
    Dimensions: 4.5 inches high, four inches wide.
    Weight: 2.88oz.






    Cotton Candy
    If you thought the Raspberry Pi was tiny, then check out the Cotton Candy, a computer that fits onto a USB stick. Billed as the smallest computer in the world,
    the Cotton Candy is designed to be a computer you can carry in your pocket.
    The $199 Linux-powered machine is simple and only needs a USB port for power and a HDMI-compatible display to operate.
    It can be plugged into any computer or device with a USB port, hooked to a display and paired with a mouse and keyboard and it's ready to go. Cotton Candy's
    manufacturers describe it as providing a secure way for people to access cloud services and apps on the move.


    Specs
    Processor: Arm Cortex-A9 1.2GHz.
    Graphics: Quad-core ARM Mali 400MP. 480p/720p/1080p decode of MPEG4-SP/H.263/H.264 AVC/MPEG-2/VC1. OpenGL ES v2.0.
    Video/Audio: HDMI 1.3a with audio for connection to devices that do not support USB mass storage.
    Memory: 1GB DRAM.
    Storage: Up to 64GB local microSD storage.
    Connectivity: Wi-fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR.USB 2.0 male form factor for power and connection to devices that support USB mass storage.
    Supported OS: Android Gingerbread, Ice Cream Sandwich and Ubuntu.







    BeagleBoard-xM



    Striking a nice balance between price and power, the $149 Beagleboard-xM is the platform of choice for many home-brew electronics and robotics projects.
    owered by USB, the board - which supports a range of operating systems including Linux, Risc OS and Windows CE - is suited for use as a low-cost PC or
    a development platform, with 512MB allowing for software multitasking and compilation of large bundles of code.
    BeagleBoard can support equipment ranging from sensors to electric motors, making it well suited to controlling electronics and robotics.
    The devices are being used as a processing unit in projects to develop an autonomous ground vehicle, unmanned aerial vehicles and even a robot postman.



    Specs
    Board: OMAP3530 system on a chip.
    Processor: 1GHz Arm Cortex-A8.
    Graphics: OpenGL ES 2.0 capable 2D-3D graphics accelerator capable of rendering 10 million polygons per second. HD video capable TMS320C64x+ DSP for signal processing at up to 430MHz.
    Memory: 512MB
    Video/Audio: DVI-D, S-Video out.Stereo audio in and out for a microphone, headphones or speakers.
    Connectivity: USB peripherals, MMC+/SD/SDIO interface for memory or wireless connectivity.
    Power: USB.







    CuBox
    With 1080p video playback and infrared remote-control compatibility, the tiny CuBox is crying out for a place in the living room.
    Unsurprisingly, the typical use for the $135 box is as a media centre or set-top box.
    But the CuBox, which supports various Linux distributions including Ubuntu and Debian, has more tricks up its sleeve – able to function
    as a thin-client device, software development platform or as part of network-attached storage setup.
    The CuBox is no bigger than two inches in any direction and draws no more than three watts of power from its 5V power supply.


    Specs
    Board: Marvell Armada 510 system on a chip.
    Processor: 800 MHz ARMv7 core
    Video/Audio: HDMI and SPDIF optical audio.
    Memory: 1GB 800MHz DDR3
    Storage: Micro SD default 2GB.
    Connectivity: 10/100/1000 Ethernet. Two high-speed USB host ports. E-SATA, microUSB device port for development uses.
    Other: Infrared receiver.







    Gumstix Overo



    The Overo are boards that provide the guts of a computer – such as the CPU and memory – and are then mounted on different expansion boards
    to change their abilities, allowing them to connect to and control different hardware.
    However, don't expect them to do everything a computer can out of the box, as they need to be mounted on expansion boards to add abilities
    such as hooking up to a display or connecting to Ethernet.
    A strong developer communityprovides wikis and how-tos to bring new users up to speed. Gumstix Overo boards range in feature and price -
    from the $115 Overo Sand to the $229 Overo FE COM – with expansion boards ranging from $27 to $129.



    Specs
    Gumstix Overo Earth: $149.
    Board: Texas Instruments OMAP 3503.
    Processor: 600MHz ARM Cortex-A8
    Memory: 512MB RAM
    Storage: 512MB Flash
    Expandability: One 140-pin Gumstix Overo series or custom expansion board. One 27-pin camera board.
    Connections: Two 70-pin connectors with 140 signals for I2C, six PWM lines, six A/D and one-wire. UART, SPI, extra MMC lines. Headset, microphone.
    Backup battery. High-Speed USB host and USB one to go. One 27-pin connector with signals for camera board.
    Power: Powered via expansion board - Overo series or custom - connected to dual 70-pin connectors.
    Size: 17mm x 58mm x 4.2mm.
    Weight: 4.3g.









    Gooseberry Board


    Specs
    • CPU : A10 1 Ghz
    • Graphics Processor : Mali 400 MHz
    • Operating System : Android 4.03
    • Onboard Storage: 4Gb (upgradeable by Micro SD memory card- 32 gb)
    • Wifi: 802.11 b/g/n
    • Connectivity: Ac jack, 1x 3.5mm Earphone Jack, 1x Mini Usb, 1x Hdmi Out, Micro Sd slot
    • Compatible OS's: Android ICS, (Expected to support Ubuntu and Arm Arch linux in the future)





    :firework:

    I am using an ET9500HD running vix 2.4. When i use the vix specific plugin i get lots of crashes. When i use the other no crashed but vid only plays for a few seconds before cutting out. Am i missing something like a save to hdd or something. Also how do i install the nousb update 8/7/12 as its not an ipk?



    You should be able to take the zip version you want, unzip and copy files to the plugins/1channel section on your receiver! (Ten mentions it in previous posts)


    Restart box and it should be updated!


    Just bare in mind installing repeat copies may cause a issue....best to remove all 1channel versions (TSPanel > Remove Addons! and double check folder before re-installing the one you want!


    Come back if any problems!

    In Response to this mate,


    Is their one for the Dreambox 800HDse ?


    You can install through the method mentioned by Banny....or look through the posts here, people have installed manually using files given in posts!


    either install ipk thorough Menu (copy ipk to tmp file on box)


    or


    Copy files (and folder) to plugins section on box using dcc!


    Restart and it should be there!