Has anyone gotten the A50 X to work on G Hub for either mobile or desktop? On mobile it usually doesn't find the headset at all, but after several tries will show a picture of the A50 X but it disappears after pressing it and then says "no devices found".

I have been looking at getting my first dedicated astro camera but the idea of hauling and hooking up a laptop while operating is not appealing to me at all. Its a deal breaker. I know about modified dslrs and intervalometers and I am ok up to that. but I'd prefer a small astro camera that can work with a handheld controller or a mobile device like a phone or small tablet ? doesn't have to be wireless. Anything like that available ?


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A netbook with an 11.6in screen is not all that cumbersome, and access to a high quality screen, keyboard and mouse will make using the astro camera easier. If you have a goto mount, you can also use it to control the guider camera and the mount.

I second this. OP has a Canon t5i as well which is compatible with the asiair if they choose not to go with an astro camera and it'll do everything you need to get up and going, guiding, platesolving etc.

As you might expect from someone who runs a Pi at the scope, I'm bullish on running a Pi at the scope :-). If all you want to do is run an astro camera, setup is minimal: plug the USB cable into the Pi, plug power into the Pi, done. (You do have to have power -- either 5V or 12V if you buy a StellarMate Plus controller, 12V for an ASIAir, or 5V if you just build your own with a Pi.) The apps drive a polar alignment assistant, plate solving for finding your target, quantitative focusing aids, autoguiding, and sequencing.

You can do the same sort of thing with a miniature Windows box Velcroed to your scope too. That gives you more software choices, but AFAIK there isn't an app specifically designed to run on a mobile device to talk to it -- you have to use remoting software and use the Windows desktop, which is a bit of a pain on a phone. (Correct me if I'm wrong there, Windows astronomers!)

kvastronomer, on 17 Feb 2022 - 11:05 AM, said:

I played with my ASI120MC camera using a phone and android app called ASICAP. You need to connect camera to your phone using USB3 cable.

I think this is what topic starter is asking.

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Fill in holes and improve talk-in performance with no additional frequencies. Deploying receive-only sites in difficult coverage areas can give portable and mobile radios the extra help they need to reliably reach a tower.

Images render fine on desktop but on my mobile device no image with the .avif extension renders. I thought .avif was widely supported on all browsers and operating systems? I am testing on an iPhone 13 on both Safari and Chrome.Does anyone else have any experience with these issues and can recommend a fix?

AstroPrint Mobile is a cross-platform (iOS & Android) mobile app that will allow you to remotely manage your 3D Printer from your smartphone and receive real-time notifications of your printer status.

Side note: Real time video streaming is NOT yet available on the mobile app. We are working on implementing live video streaming in a future version of AstroPrint Mobile. Meanwhile, enjoy live video streaming via a browser on the cloud.

Yesterday, Amazon announced a mobile home robot called Astro, which we've been expecting for the past several years. Astro's got wheels. It's got cameras. It's got a screen. It has two cup holders for some reason. It costs $1,000. I am very, very confused.

Helps you look out for loved ones: This one is slightly more complicated. If we acknowledge the fact that there are situations in which not being able to reach a family member via phone might be a concern, the problem that you face with Astro is that people are often uncomfortable having a robot with mobility and cameras being accessible from outside their home without their in-the-moment consent. I ran into this issue when testing the Ohmni telepresence robot with my partner's elderly and distant relative: telepresence was certainly nice to have there, but it came along with privacy concerns. The simple fact is that people don't want to be surprised by a mobile robot in their home. Amazon, we should note, seems to have taken privacy quite seriously with Astro. Users can designate off-limits areas, and there are easy ways to disable (in hardware) audio, video, and mobility. But if you do that, then the advantages that Astro offers go away. Users therefore have to choose between being able to have a robot check on them when they might need it, and maintaining their expectation of privacy. It's not Amazon's fault that telepresence robots work this way, but it's also not something that they've solved with Astro.

Mobile telepresence:I am a fan of mobile telepresence. I think there's tangible value there. But Astro is not a good mobile telepresence platform, because that's not what it was designed for. Amazon's PR video, you'll notice, shows the telepresence application in pretty much the only possible way where the small size of the robot wouldn't be incredibly annoying: interacting with someone who is literally on the floor. If you were instead trying to talk to a standing (or even sitting) adult, you'd be looking up their nose, or worse. Amazon itself has better remote presence solutions; they're not mobile, but putting a stationary telepresence device on a table or countertop makes much more sense than a floor-level robot.

Several folks in the video talk about making science fiction a reality, which is a predictable and entirely inevitable expectations fail for any robot. We've learned over and over again that with a robot like this, it's super important to keep expectations in check, which brings me to one of the other comments in the video, about how this type of product didn't exist before. It totally did. Other companies have tried it and not gotten it to work. Maybe not this exact combination of features because every robot is different, but autonomous mobile home robots? Yeah, we've seen them before, and we know how hard it is, and I'm not convinced that Astro is different enough or better enough to somehow succeed where others have not. As much as I respect Henrik Christensen, I do not understand at all when he says that "Astro is a huge step forward." Maybe I'm missing something, but I just don't get it.

Any time an image from telescope or even a camera lens with a central obstruction is out of focus, it will show "astronomical donuts". That's just the nature of the beast. It's sometimes a challenge to convince a phone to focus on an image through a telescope.

Amazon announced a new security solution for small and medium-sized businesses that leverages the Astro mobile robot. Astro was introduced in September 2021 with an underwhelming feature set for consumers. The new solution, called Astro for Business, is designed to give small business owners peace of mind and deliver additional security services beyond the stationary monitoring capabilities of the Amazon-owned Ring security product line which was acquired by Amazon in 2018 for over $1.2 billion.

The use case that Amazon is pursuing with Astro now is delivering a mobile security patrol solution that can run around your business after hours, monitoring the facility and alerting a business owner if something nefarious happens. Whereas the Ring security solution can easily monitor all of the entrances and exits to a facility with various sensors (including vision cameras), Astro provides a mobile camera that can be repositioned to investigate a situation remotely.

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