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Difference between revisions of "Anyma uDMX"

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[[Image:udmx5pin.jpg|right]]'''Anyma uDMX''' comes with a open firmware, which is rare. The USB communication is handled by the firmware instead of a separate chip. This must be very cheap to build!
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Link: http://anyma.ch/research/udmx/ <br>
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{{Features|tx=yes|win=yes|osx=yes|linux=yes}}
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[[Image:udmx5pin.jpg|right]]
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'''Anyma uDMX''' comes with a open firmware, which is rare. The USB communication is handled by the firmware instead of a separate chip. This must be very cheap to build!
  
 
Hardware:
 
Hardware:

Revision as of 08:47, 1 February 2007

Link: http://anyma.ch/research/udmx/
{{ #if: | Free! }}{{ #if: yes | Windows Support }}{{ #if: yes | Linux Support }}{{ #if: yes | Mac OS X Support }}{{ #if: yes | Sends DMX }}{{ #if: | Receives DMX }}{{ #if: | RDM Support }}{{ #if: | MIDI Support }}{{ #if: | HTTP Support }}

Udmx5pin.jpg


Anyma uDMX comes with a open firmware, which is rare. The USB communication is handled by the firmware instead of a separate chip. This must be very cheap to build!

Hardware:

  • From USB to DMX (one way DMX)
  • All the electronics is inside the XLR - two smd IC's: An AVR microcontroller and a RS485 driver
  • The DMX data is buffered and the transmission is timed by the microcontroller
  • USB powered
  • No galvanic isolation


Software:

  • An external object for Max/MSP (OSX)
  • A console app for Linux/OSX
  • MIDI control via a OSX app
  • There's an example how to control the console app from php scripts (seems easy)
  • Gratis firmware. The DMX part is GPL, the USB part from Objective Development is "open" but all changes belongs to them.


Anyma uDMX
Objective Development's "AVR-USB