dalegreer
lvl.1
United States
Offline
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Actually I did, but from a software developer's point of view it was pretty stupid, they still need to fix their software.
On my two older machines the video from the aircraft would do ok at first, but then get progressively more behind until the software hung. On my newer, faster machine, the video was fine, but I'd get the aircraft movement error.
But then I remembered my older desktop PC has two different USB boards, one on the front with slower USB, like 2.0 or 1.0, and one on the back with USB 3.0 (I think). Anyway, I switched the aircraft from the front to the back ports on my PC, and then it worked. I guess the USB on the back is faster so it can keep up with the video.
So you have to have a machine that's not too slow and not too fast. As a software developer, this makes me think they have no timing or throttling in the software, they just depend on whatever compatibility exists in the computers they're programming on at work, and not testing on anything else. |
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