Nomadd what's the actual prospects of us setting up a webcam on a pole in your front yard?
Quote from: mlindner on 04/20/2016 08:28 amNomadd what's the actual prospects of us setting up a webcam on a pole in your front yard? I'm thinking about it. Ground level wouldn't be much good because of the haze and heat distortion most days. It's better if you're 20 feet up. I use to use 2 10' sections of heavy 2" electrical conduit for my homemade scada remotes in the oil field. Plant a heavy, 6' piece of angle steel half way in the ground for a mount and a person can stand the thing up or take it down on his own. With nothing but a small camera and a little TV antenna, the pole will handle hurricane winds easy. The main problem at the moment is the "web" part of webcam. There isn't any out here except for cellphone. Satellite internet isn't any cheaper than LTE and isn't nearly as good, so nobody gets that. Two new conduits are in as far as the gas well a few hundred yards down the road, so we're waiting to see what they do with those.
This post will walk you though how to protect your Raspberry Pi while powering it from a solar-powered system, and provide some tips for reducing the power consumption. Our desired goal is to power the Raspberry Pi with only a 9W solar panel (which you’ll see is not easy considering how power-hungry these boards are), so we’ll provide you with the know-how and tools necessary to reduce the power consumption.
Powering a Raspberry Pi from Solar PowerQuoteThis post will walk you though how to protect your Raspberry Pi while powering it from a solar-powered system, and provide some tips for reducing the power consumption. Our desired goal is to power the Raspberry Pi with only a 9W solar panel (which you’ll see is not easy considering how power-hungry these boards are), so we’ll provide you with the know-how and tools necessary to reduce the power consumption.
Quote from: mvpel on 04/20/2016 02:31 pmPowering a Raspberry Pi from Solar PowerQuoteThis post will walk you though how to protect your Raspberry Pi while powering it from a solar-powered system, and provide some tips for reducing the power consumption. Our desired goal is to power the Raspberry Pi with only a 9W solar panel (which you’ll see is not easy considering how power-hungry these boards are), so we’ll provide you with the know-how and tools necessary to reduce the power consumption.I wouldn't bother with a solar power system, just run an outdoor extension cord up the pole and wire it in to the breaker box in the house.
Like Silicon Valley, Boston, the UK and Europe, Brownsville is faced with the chore of having to figure out what commercial opportunities the privately fueled “new space” sector will spawn and how to take advantage of them.That’s according to Sean Casey, managing director of the Silicon Valley Space Center in Palo Alto, California, and keynote speaker at Tuesday’s “Project Space: STARGATE TALKS” gathering at the Brownsville Event Center. The name of his talk was “CreatingNewSpaceCity.”SpaceX, which expects to begin launching rockets from BocaChicaBeach in 2018, represents the top tier of the new-space sector. Casey said the sector is full of opportunities for payload specialists, rocket developers, entrepreneurs, students and professionals, and that Brownsville can be a player.“SpaceX launching rockets is about access to space,” he said. “Once you’re in space you’re like, ‘OK, now what are we going to do? What are the advantages of that?’”STARGATE is the commercial arm of the Center for Advanced Radio Astronomy, part of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, and is a public-private partnership among SpaceX, UTRGV and the governor’s office.“The facilities that SpaceX is providing are going to reduce the cost of access to space,” Casey said. “As you reduce the cost of access to space, a larger number of people can participate in those endeavors.”
Quote from: mlindner on 04/20/2016 06:37 pmQuote from: mvpel on 04/20/2016 02:31 pmPowering a Raspberry Pi from Solar PowerQuoteThis post will walk you though how to protect your Raspberry Pi while powering it from a solar-powered system, and provide some tips for reducing the power consumption. Our desired goal is to power the Raspberry Pi with only a 9W solar panel (which you’ll see is not easy considering how power-hungry these boards are), so we’ll provide you with the know-how and tools necessary to reduce the power consumption.I wouldn't bother with a solar power system, just run an outdoor extension cord up the pole and wire it in to the breaker box in the house.Or do something like this and run power + ethernet over a standard ethernet cable:http://astrobeano.blogspot.com/2012/10/24v-passive-poe-for-raspberry-pi.html40 meters should be enough, right?
The main problem at the moment is the "web" part of webcam. There isn't any out here except for cellphone. Satellite internet isn't any cheaper than LTE and isn't nearly as good, so nobody gets that. Two new conduits are in as far as the gas well a few hundred yards down the road, so we're waiting to see what they do with those.
Upon completion, the entire cable system will be the property of University. No other fiber strands will be installed in the University infrastructure.
There's a pedestal at the end of the conduits near the village marked "University of Texas". There are also new AT&T splice pedestals along the route. I never did see how they ran those new conduits a mile or so at a time without digging, but assume they either pulled them through the big, 5" AT&T conduit or the old water line. The runs are together and not on both sides of the highway like the original proposal. So, there's a possibility the runs they've made are one UT and one AT&T with the second (protected conduit, whatever that means) UT one still to be done on the south side of the road. If they pulled the two conduits through the AT&T conduit, they might be using one to replace the existing phone company lines.
The runs are together and not on both sides of the highway like the original proposal. So, there's a possibility the runs they've made are one UT and one AT&T with the second (protected conduit, whatever that means)
Quote from: Nomadd on 04/24/2016 02:28 pmThe runs are together and not on both sides of the highway like the original proposal. So, there's a possibility the runs they've made are one UT and one AT&T with the second (protected conduit, whatever that means) Generally the cables include multiple fibers or fiber pairs. "protected" sounds like it could refer to some form of armor on the conduit, but it's also common to have "protection" circuits which are backup paths -- preferably taking a different route, often forming a bidirectional ring. Multiple fibers in the same conduit can be used to protect against equipment failures on the ends but that isn't ideal when your threat model also includes rogue backhoes or the occasional rogue rocket...
A Spacex representative had stated that the Village would be provided with internet service. This is being provided as SpaceX wants to be a good community member and that the fiber optics had to be ran out to the Launch Site.
There are some other options to lay new cables underground without digging a whole trench:I have seen this used to lay new internet cables before. The machines can dig a tunnel for a cable right under roads without having to dig up the road.
It looks like they are collecting and hauling off water. They have the site pretty well damned off, but I can't see it being much good for rain during storms. It might be mainly for the stuff coming up the wicks.