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The 2.4GHz WiFi has multiple channels (16?), with each channel capable of supporting multiple connections. I assume that multiple channels can operate simultaneously.
Friend of mine was planning of creating a similar setup. He mentioned that the JMRI remote panels are network and performance hogs because the panels are bitmaps and ever refresh redraws the entire panel.
Thanks. Good point. The plan was to hardwire a 5V bus anyway to each tablet, with manual power-down on every tablet after a session. In the meanwhile I should probably just Velcro the panels to the benchwork face for the time being until the fascia is done, with a local 5V supply during operation, power-down and unplug when done. This'll emulate the long-term plan.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
... Clue me in on JMRI control panels with tablets. I love to buy a cheap tablet for a control panel.
... Seems a bit too modern for the early 1970s tho, need some of the latest panels from Union Switch & Signal... 😉
First, apologies for not replying sooner. I tried two days ago, but rather, I clicked on "Preview" and thought it had been posted. If you've created a control panel that works on the JMRI computer in PanelPro, you already have one that will work on a tablet. It's a matter of turning on JMRI's web server built into PanelPro. Under PanelPro preferences look for "Start Up". If the web server isn't already on the list (should be there by default), then "Add" it. Using the tablet's web browser, enter the same IP address as the WiThrottle/Engine Driver, except use port 12080, like so: http://<your IP>:12080. You'll be amazed by how easy it is to get it going. I know I was.
Micro chips. Placed just behind the ear. All you have to do is think about which train to run, and voila!