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Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
Great! I will test this as soon as possible. Just for my understanding, when you say out of tree does this mean that it is not yet included in the INDI project but will be in the future ? I can't wait to see your work added to the list of supported hardware on the official INDI page -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
Thanks for this heads up. I only plan to use Ekos on the laptop and everything else at the mount, so no need for bandwith to download anything as I will use an SSD hard drive at the mount -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
This is so cool thank you for working on this as this was my last hurdle. How do you plan on publishing the driver ? Will it be added to the INDI package ? What is the next step to get it publicly availlable ? Good timing also as I will receive my Raspberry PI on monday and just finished my powerpanel... This way I can have the RpI and powerpanel at the mount and control from a laptop over WIFI or ethernet if WIFI fails on me no more 5m USB cable or VNC on 2 laptops. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
ho the sweet sound of reading this (the game is on) -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I had a similar issue and started a thread on the INDI forum. Someone else also posted this week " I am running Kubuntu 16.04 LTS, libindi1 installed fine, but could not find package indi-full either. Also a try to install indi-sx failed, no such package." Answer " we just migrated to GitHub and re-building the whole packages again, so please try again in a day or two." maybe this is related to the issue you have. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
This is what happens when passion, knowledge and opensource come together.... Magic ! -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
After years of lurking, I just ordered a Raspberry PI 3 My endgame is to install Kstars on Linux Mint (once the ubuntu-16.04 version of Mint is release in july/august) and install the INDI part on a raspberry PI. This way I can have the "control" part at the telescope and use the interface at my desk over WIFI or an ethernet cable, I'll be free from my 5m USB cable at last Problem is that I've just completed my PowerPanel V2.0 and I am already thinking of buidling a new one for my RP. That would be "PowerPanel V3.0 embedded Raspberry PI edition" The combination of my PowerPanel+RP at the mount would mean that there would be only 1 cable hanging from the mount, the power cable to the battery. Hopefully, in the near futur, I will be able to add an eCat to the PowerPanel (v4.0 ?) and get rid of this last cable -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I modified the post. You are right the package is called Kstars-Bleeding On ubuntu : sudo apt-get install kstars-bleeding -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
For those who are following the progress of my journey down the Linux eldorado road (wink) Here are a couple of videos that gives a nice overview of the Ekos interface (guiding and Astrophotography) Astrophotography Tutorial in Ekos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vt4Gb3Yfh9g Autoguiding in KStars https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tpuOJ28200 As a reminder: Kstars is the planetarium software and from there you can start Ekos. So basically, under linux you just need to install the INDI drivers and platform, install Kstars-Bleeding and that's it. Ekos is part of Kstars. Using Ekos you get "advanced Astrophotography tool for Linux. This includes highly accurate GOTOs using astrometry solver, ability to measure and correct polar alignment errors , auto-focus & auto-guide capabilities, and capture of single or stack of images with filter wheel support." So to simplify and give a general idea, just remember that: INDI = ASCOM Kstars = Carte Du Ciel Ekos = EQMOD/AstroTortilla/PHD and much more -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
This goes to show how powerful open source is Thank you ajk for your work and time on this, let me know so I can be one of the beta tester if needed -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
OpenSuSE.... it's german for « Software und System-Entwicklung » (Software and Systems Development) -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
Still digging and I just realized that the 'admin' on the forum who told me this is actually the Lead Developer & Maintainer Jasem Mutlaq .... which also explain the cryptic command ppa:mutlaqja/ppa -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
As you may have read earlier, Mint was my prefered choice but I could not add the repository to get Kstars installed as version ubuntu 14.4 is not 'supported' even though it says otherwise on INDI website Now there is good news as there has been an annoucement that Linux Mint 18 "Sarah," will be based on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus), so there is hope as it is expected to be released later this year. " Mint 18 "Sarah," which will be available in a Beta form in early June for early adopters and public beta testers. The final release of Linux Mint 18 will ship in the coming months, most probably in July or early August, but there's no exact date set yet." I'll try the Beta version to make sure I can install Kstars and Ekos properly. If I can, then Mint will be the prefered platform for me Another thing to consider is that Kstars/Ekos works only on KDE -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
And there is one major thing that I always forget to mention when talking about Linux in general is that when you update your system, you update EVERYTHING on it. No more visiting a bunch of website and keeping tabs on which version you have and which is current. In my case I just need to run this: sudo apt-get update that's it! Eveything is updated at once to the latest version availlable... less time spend managing your system, more time spent imaging -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
Short report: WOW ! Long report: I've downloaded and compared a bunch of Ubuntu flavors. Not that I am advocating for a particular one but I had to start somewhere OS installation I finally settled on Lubuntu which is a lightweight variant of Ubuntu. It is popular with PC and laptop users running on low-spec hardware. the interface is minimal but still nice (Win95 look) (1) install is next-next-next type. Took 10 minutes, no brainer. Total disk space used for OS+Kstars (which includes Ekos)+Catalogs+Drivers .... 7GB (2) once installed I just ran 2 simple commands to add a repository (an online location where you obtain patches and software from) and 1 command to install the drivers + kstars.... realllllly simple stuff What do I get for my troubles ? * Kstars (a kind of Carte Du Ciel/Stellarium) I could still install Carte Du Ciel and/or Stellarium if I wish to do so * I was looking for Ekos and learned that I had to actually go open Kstars > tools > and launch Ekos from there Q: if Kstars is Carte Du Ciel, what is Ekos ? A: it is the graphical client used to control the devices exposed by INDI Q: ok, so what can I do with this graphical interface ? A: Control your telescope, CCD (& DSLRs), filter wheel, focuser, guider, adaptive optics unit, and any INDI-compatible auxiliary device from Ekos. - Built-in native Auto Guiding with support for automatic dithering between exposures and support for Adaptive Optics devices in addition to traditional guiders. Save time by using existing dark frames in the dark files library. - Extremely accurate GOTOs using astrometry.net solver (both Online and Offline solvers supported). - Load & Slew: Load a FITS image, slew to solved coordinates, and center the mount on the exact image coordinates in order to get the same desired frame. - Measure & Correct Polar Alignment errors using astromety.net solver. - Completely automated scheduler to control all your observatory equipment, select the best targets for imaging given current conditions and constraints, monitor weather conditions, and capture your data while you are away! - Auto and manual focus modes using Half-Flux-Radius (HFR) method. - Automated unattended meridian flip. Ekos performs post meridian flip alignment, calibration, and guiding to resume the capture session. - Automatic focus between exposures when a user-configurable HFR limit is exceeded. - Powerful sequence queue for batch capture of images with optional prefixes, timestamps, filter wheel selection, and much more! - Automatic flat field capture, just set the desired ADU and let Ekos does the rest! - Automatic abort and resumption of exposure tasks if guiding errors exceed a user-configurable value. - Support for dome slaving. - Complete integration with KStars Observation Planner and SkyMap In other words, using this slick interface I can slew, PA, guide, platesolve, sequence, focus, control filter wheel, dither, dome control. All this can be done remotely from another OSX/Windows or Linux machine. Next step is to install Pixinsight and openPHD (this is not required as you can choose to either use the guiding in Ekos or an external guiding software like PHD) and test the whole system in a live environment. I am not saying that all is perfect but so far, the ease of use and ease of installation plus what I get in return (a tightly integrated open source system) is worth my trouble... Now, let me be clear, a lot of commercial software out there can do this, maybe even be better at it, so I am not trying to say that this is the be-all and end-all of astronomy software and I may be overenthusiastic ...let see what happens from here -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
Houuuu ! please let us know of the progress in this thread or pm me so I can update this. I see that there are a lot of focuser already supported (shoestring, robofocus, JMI, etc) so it would be a shame if HitecAstro was not in the near future. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I agree. Unfortunatly when following the procedure to add the packages, it fails and this was the explanation provided by the admin (Mint is too old) which is a shame ... I've downloaded 3 versions of ubuntu ( MATE / Lubuntu / Kubuntu, I may even try Fedora) as I have a lot of time on my hands In any case, the more I dig into this, the more I am hopeful that I can make a smooth transition. I see so many doors opening with Raspberry PI, web interface/server control, Android/IOS ... Good times ! -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
From uname -a and documentation, Linux Mint 17.3 is based on Ubuntu 14.04 (kernel v3.13). The current release is 16.04 (kernel v4.4) 14.04 Trusty Tahr 3.13 14.10 Utopic Unicorn 3.16 15.04 Vivid Vervet 3.19 15.10 Wily Werewolf 4.2 16.04 Xenial Xerus 4.4 I pointed out to the admin that the installation page does say : "INDI Library is available for Ubuntu 14.04 and higher." which is misleading to say the least ... I was so happy to see that Mint was supported... it is not. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I've downloaded both and will try which one looks best That is such a shame as Mint Linux was quite nice, best interface (for my taste) I've come across so far. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
ho the humanity ! INDI Forum Admin : "I think I would have to add a warning NOT to use Mint since it's pretty old compared to Ubuntu. It's recommended to download Kubuntu/Ubuntu 16.04 and then you won't have problems with the PPA" -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I did attend a 3 day training for Pixinsight as the learning curve can be a bit steep. I was fortunate enough of being completely new to image processing so I did not have to get rid of photoshop mindsets There are a lot of tutorial for PI and once you understand the philosophy of it, it is a joy to work with. Very powerful. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I am taking the plunge ! I got a spare laptop with Win7 on it, I'll install Linux Mint (interface closer to Windows... baby steps) and see if I can install the INDI stuff. Since Ubuntu is supported, I would guess that Mint would also work even thought it is not explicitely listed in the list of platform. ... I'll report on this. -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I don't do mosaics, but maybe you could try this out and let us know http://indilib.org/support/tutorials/155-create-super-mosaics-with-ekos.html -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I agree that it can be a bit scary. It does take a new mindset and it can be frustrating at times. It's like throwing out old slippers and putting on new ones... it hurts for a while -
Moving to Linux - What works and alternatives
Vox45 replied to Vox45's topic in Discussions - Software
I feel a bit foolish now ! While researching all this and following links posted by members above, I see that there is already something out there that solves all my needs. Just take a look at http://indilib.org/ Runs on: Preconfigured Virtual machine (Kubuntu) Ubuntu Fedora Geentoo Android Raspberry PI Supports lots of devices (Filter Wheels, CCDs, Domes, Focuser, etc) Guiding with PHD, plate solving with astrometry.net Using Ekos solves the APT/BYEOS need and AstroTortilla. http://indilib.org/about/ekos.html My only remaining issue is the HitecDCfocus ...