And we have also discovered just few days ago, that this exact issue can be solved by different positioning of the phone - if the bottom of the phone (where mic and speaker are) is not touching any surface, the chirping artefacts are gone. So try to put the phone on a book or something similar with the bottom of the phone over the edge.

I have encounter my first cache that makes use of a Chirp Wireless Beacon. I have a Garmin eTtrex 30x. I have turned chirp searching on, when I'm at the posted coordinates, the Garmin does not react in any way, what should I be looking for? I can't find any guidance on the web. I'm hoping/asking for help here. Thanks.


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I got a *FREE!!!* Garmin Montana 680t from a geocacher who wasn't using it anymore, and the first cache I tried was a local chirp cache. And it didn't pick up anything! Bummer! I actually found the cache and signed the log, but I'm waiting to log it as found until I can get the chirp to work (or never, whichever is sooner).

Gotta love that NFC (near field communication) tech in most new phones. My samsung A42 works a charm with any chirp app. I use Chirp Wolf but as long as the phone has the tech, most apps will do it.


There really aren't that many wireless beacon caches. I've put one out and plan to do more of different types. Thus far I have a wifi network name one but I want to do a true CHIRP and a radio station one.

The CHIRP-based caches that I've found have avoided the "special equipment" issue by putting the chirp and a slip of laminated paper in the same container. Seekers can use the CHIRP data if they want, or they can simply find the hidden container and get the same info from the slip of laminated paper.

I managed to use CHIRPwolf on a Garmin chirp based geocache (GC2K8K0)with android (SamsungA6) back on 6/26/2020. I tried today with a newer phone (SamsungA42) and I cannot get it to work. I heard there is some sort of ANT+ dongle you can buy.

I set my Chirp cache as "wireless receiver required" and Difficulty-4.5. Most of the actual difficulty was the uber-aggressive hide style. But it was that high also because the stages (two chirps) were so very frustratingly finicky. Yes, I had in mind that only the most dedicated (and patient) cachers would even look at it. The intent was, "it's cool and nerdy". The reality was, it was very, very terrible.

As for OF, the iphone version has OF integration too, so I just wrapped the java API with native calls. However, the android version of the SDK has a totally different API to the iOS version, so I had to come up with equivalent function calls. But in the end it was very simple - pretty much just 5 functions - login, logout, view dashboard, post highscore and post achievement.

So what message do you get when you try and install Chirp Chirp, Walzer?

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As for OF, the iphone version has OF integration too, so I just wrapped the java API with native calls. However, the android version of the SDK has a totally different API to the iOS version, so I had to come up with equivalent function calls. But in the end it was very simple - pretty much just 5 functions - login, logout, view dashboard, post highscore and post achievement.

It ends up the opening and closing was setting off a chirp because the system thought the door sensor was being tampered with. A call to support led to some random troubleshooting. Taking the cover off the sensor and putting it back on ended up solving the problem.

As shown in the following diagram, a user asks Alexa to chirp. This triggers a Lambda function, which in turn returns a JSON response with the mp3 endpoint URL for Alexa to play. Alexa requests the mp3 file from the Chirp API and plays the chirp.

I've been hearing the same bird chirping noises for quite a while. At first, I wasn't sure where it was coming from. However, I am having the same sounds come from my Imac and my work laptop. The only common link is that the sound happens when both are running google chrome.

Chirp enables your apps to send and receive information using sound. A "chirp" encodes an array of bytes as an audio signal, which can be transmitted by any device with a speaker and received by any device with a microphone and Chirp SDK. It is designed to be robust over distances of several meters, and in noisy, everyday environments.

Signup/Login into Chirp SDK Developer Portal. To configure your chirp app, navigate to the applications page and select a protocol. Take a note of the key, secret and config string. We need this to configure chirp SDK later in the app.

chirp is a one-of-a-kind wireless beacon designed specifically for the outdoor adventures of geocaching. Affordable, durable and waterproof, chirp can communicate with, and be programmed by, any compatible wireless-enabled Garmin handheld (sold separately). chirp stores hints, multicache coordinates, counts visitors and confirms the cache is nearby. chirp is password protected and has a battery life of up to 1 year.

In a nutshell, digital files are turned into digital audio and the app then lets out a chirping sound. If another device has the Chirp app active, it will listen to the sound and decode the digital data. That's the TL;DR version of the technical explanation of how Chirp works.

Each chirp lasts only about two seconds. It's super efficient and fast -- much more so than Bluetooth -- and doesn't require any special hardware. The only requirement is that your device must have a dual-core processor. e24fc04721

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