tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post1761129640007032776..comments2024-02-09T21:43:15.143+00:00Comments on /bɑs ˈtjɛ̃ no ˈse ʁɑ/ (hadess) | News: Philips Wireless, modernisedBastien Nocerahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14621847888418739807noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post-56488623197041501332017-07-04T09:13:31.325+01:002017-07-04T09:13:31.325+01:00Joe: I'm afraid that I never finished the OLED...Joe: I'm afraid that I never finished the OLED plugin for Mopidy. I wanted to preview my UI changes locally, but cairotft didn't work on virtual framebuffers. See https://github.com/LinkCareServices/cairotft/issues/2Bastien Nocerahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14621847888418739807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post-63251083789018435472017-07-04T07:59:21.990+01:002017-07-04T07:59:21.990+01:00I tried your code for 1306 OLED display. I am unab...I tried your code for 1306 OLED display. I am unable to get to run. I have a Raspberry pi3 running jessie and mopidy.<br /><br />Is your code functional? hadess/mopidy-ssd1306 <br /><br /> I tried adding pip install Mopidy-Ssd1306, and adding [ssd1306]<br />enabled = true to the mopidy.conf. I had to set my config to INFO MPD server running at [::ffff:0.0.0.0]:6600<br />INFO HTTP server running at [::ffff:0.0.0.0]:6680 to get it to work. (127.0.0.1) would NOT work on my Pi.<br /><br />I would like the oled to display the ip address and song information.<br /><br /><br />ThanksAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16923672781544601337noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post-36913916756400011532015-09-25T14:00:59.766+01:002015-09-25T14:00:59.766+01:00Paul: the audio quality is good enough, there'...Paul: the audio quality is good enough, there's just one "pop" when playback starts, which isn't so nice. Bear in mind that there's just one speaker.<br /><br />I looked for quadrature encoders, but as you mention, I wouldn't know how to plug them in given that I've already used a number of the GPIO ports, and I'd still need to attach them to the case somehow. If you find cheap ones in Europe, let me know.<br /><br />And about Fedora on the Raspberry Pi, only the latest Pis work with a (nearly-stock) Fedora, I went cheap :)Bastien Nocerahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14621847888418739807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post-37815514190439418592015-09-25T12:42:29.130+01:002015-09-25T12:42:29.130+01:00Nicely done! Now I'm jealous… :-)Nicely done! Now I'm jealous… :-)Alexandre Frankehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00237272182532433558noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-977684764667858073.post-16859380896571820992015-09-25T08:36:52.284+01:002015-09-25T08:36:52.284+01:00Congratulations on getting it going - my very simi...Congratulations on getting it going - my very similar project keeps on stalling (nearly two years and counting). <br /><br />If you are still not happy with audio quality I would recommend HiFiBerry products - my system currently uses the DAC+, but I have just seen the Amp+, which would let me get rid of the PC speakers I am currently cannibalising.<br /><br />I plan to mount the original controls on quadrature encoders, and run these to an Arduinio (the HiFIBerry ate all my GPIO) running as a HID Joystick device. Should have it running by about 2020, at this rate<br /><br />Re Fedora on the Raspberry Pi - it seems to happen in fits and starts. Pidora came out with a couple of releases targetting Pi A/B/B+ (compiled to Arm v6, like raspbian), there was a F21 remix for the 2B (arm v7), and there are some instructions for getting it going by overwriting the Fedora ARM boot partition with the Raspberry Pi firmware - my 2B currently runs F22.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07001817937045489428noreply@blogger.com