Thet's the end goal... to have a USB-to-POD adapter that the FlukeEm can drive.  That way all you need is the adapter, a pod, and your laptop and you can start making house calls. :-) 

I have not worked on the PIA (Peripheral Interface Adapter) portion yet.  My goal was to get the ability to read in spripts done first so I can make some debug scripts to debug my PIA interface.

-Adam

On 11/15/05, John Robertson <jrr@flippers.com> wrote:
Will I need a touch screen (ducking)...

Looks nice, will the software also allow using the probe with some sort of interface? That is the other useful function of the 9010A.

John :-#)#

At 3:34 PM -0500 11/15/05, Adam Courchesne wrote:
With the new house and soooo many other projects floating around in my head I've been playing with the idea of making the FlukeEm Fluke 9010A emulator open source... or at least take on some others to help with the coding.   Pehaps the latter....

If so I'd like to lay out my planned direction for the tool (I think I did this in the past and got tons of praise.. leading me to believe I was going in the right direction)  The whole shebang in written in Object Oriented C++ with some OpenGL for the imaging.

Anyways, here's how it looks to date:
http://www.onecircuit.com/images/flukeem20.jpg

I belive I was in the process of getting the emulated RS232 interface to work, so that files that were compiled by rksic? (I forget) could be read right in.  The capability may be there.. I have to check.

Comments/Thoughts?

-Adam
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-Adam
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