I have a couple of ideas in mind that involve connecting an ADALM-Pluto SDR to a phone or tablet. Usually, the Pluto is connected to a PC through USB, and the Pluto acts as an Ethernet device, so that network communications between the PC and Pluto are possible. I want to have the same thing running with my Android phone, which is an unrooted Xiaomi Mi 11 Lite (model M2101K9AG, if anyone is curious).

on the Pluto once and reboot (these settings are saved as uBoot environment variables to persistent storage), then enable Ethernet tethering on the phone every time that I connect the Pluto. I can go to the web browser in the phone and check that I can access the Pluto web server at 192.168.89.1.


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If for some reason none of these two approaches work, I have observed that Android always assigns an IPv6 link-local address to eth0 (this is something that the Linux kernel does for each interface when IPv6 is enabled). IPv6 support is disabled in the Pluto kernel, but we could compile our own kernel with IPv6 enabled, and this would work for communications between the Pluto and the Android phone.

As we see, it is configured to listen on the usb0 interface that gets created for RNDIS. If we want to make it listen instead in the usb1 interface that we have created manually, we can change this and restart the service. If we now unplug and plug the phone, and run ip addr in Android, we should see that the eth0 interface has an IP address.

The second option is enabling Ethernet tethering. This has the potential advantage that if it works, then the Pluto will be able to access the internet through the phone. However, I think that not all the Android ROMs support this feature. In my ROM, it can be enabled in Portable hotspot > Ethernet tethering.

I'm not sure which category fits the most for this, but I'll just set on here. I'm planning to buy a Celestron AstroMaster 130EQ and an LG G6 phone to capture this dwarf planet. A guy from YouTube (AstroCreation) got to get Pluto on photo using a DSLR and a 6" Newtonian by doing several 20-second exposures and stacking them. Because of this, I'm wondering if I could do it only by a phone (afocal imaging), and a 5". This time it would be 30 seconds than 20, as for the not-very-high-quality camera and the smaller objective.

I would infer that the images I would have gotten from the phone would be quite noisy, as from the amateur AP pics of the Milky Way I saw on Facebook. I really gotta take a lot of flat and dark frames for this.

1. What am I going to label them, then? Do I just put "Light" "Bias" or "Flat" and DSS would identify it as it is?


2. I don't think it's impossible. It's just an inch away to the guy's objective (AstroCreation), and I would say i'd just need more integration time for that to get the same result as his. I may tap that camera button hundreds of times, but I'm focusing at the result than the exhausting process.


3. He really did it! With a tracker though. I won't use any trackers. Here's the link to the video (if the embed works) - =1s


4. The phone probably could, a little. That specific phone has a max shutter of about 30 seconds and 2700 ISO I believe.

If your scope has a reasonable tracking capability, a "stationary" m14 target should be easy, even with a smartphone. Certainly the result won't be aesthetically pleasing, but the target will be visible. It's incredibly difficult to reduce the noise from a smartphone to a level which is considered "pretty", even with dark frames. This is particularly so with JPEGs - do you have the ability to capture data in a more "raw" format?

I'm confident you can capture Pluto with a smartphone because I've done it with an 80mm scope. But you'll need pretty good tracking, at least for a few seconds at a time, and you'll need to stack at least two minutes' worth of data, preferably calibrating with darks. But like many endeavors, there are a hundred ways to skin a cat and this is really far from the optimal one.

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After I redeemed and installed T-Mobile's "Free hit movies and exclusive viewing experiences" benefit found on T-Mobile Tuesdays, neither Pluto app on two separate Roku devices will open. ???? I have deleted and reinstalled the apps, updated Roku, restarted the Roku app, etc., etc. to no avail. My Pluto account works perfectly on other platforms: Android phone, Mac, Windows PC, etc. The issue is limited to the Roku TV apps on two Samsung TV's. Sheesh!

For Sound and Voice modes, you can hide the app in the background or even turn off phone screen. But for Vibrate, Motion, Distance and Smile modes, you have to keep the phone screen on with the app running in the foreground.

Do not use the Bluetooth menu in your phone's Settings. You need to scan and pair with Pluto Trigger within the Pluto Trigger app. Simply follow the Quick Start Guide. Remember to turn on Bluetooth on your phone.

Yes, you need a smartphone or tablet to operate the Pluto Trigger. The compatible devices are iPhone 4s or later, iPad 3 or later, iPad Mini, iPod Touch 5 or later, Android 4.3 with Bluetooth 4.0 LE (Low Energy) or later. The Pluto Trigger app is used to adjust the settings and start one of the Modes on the trigger. Later on, some modes (e.g. Sound, Light, Lightning and PIR) are able to run stand-alone without a phone, even after a power cycle.

I also found it interesting (you may find it helpful or perhaps annoying) that the phone app pretty regularly sent me push notifications when there was content it presumed I may have an interest in viewing.

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I had my friend try it with his phone, as he's sighted, and also uses the app. He didn't have the issue at all until he turned on Voiceover, at which point he also was able to reproduce this behavior.

NASA's New Horizons mission phoned home on the night of 14 July, sending a burst of telemetry data that confirmed it had successfully flown past Pluto in the first-ever visit to the dwarf planet. Engineers and scientists in mission control, at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, erupted into cheers just before 9 p.m. Eastern time as the signal appeared, as a strings of 1s and 0s, confirming that a deep-space antenna in Madrid had locked onto the spacecraft's signal.

Downloading and installing Pluto TV on Android TV is like a kid playing. Android TV comes with all the same simple functions as an Android phone. Tv is the best way to enjoy entertainment with family. 006ab0faaa

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