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Old 15-11-2011, 08:51 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Dave Liquorice[_3_] Dave Liquorice[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2011
Posts: 195
Default Weather stations

On Tue, 15 Nov 2011 01:52:05 +0000, Timothy Murphy wrote:

It's a pity none of the cheap weather stations seem to work with

WiFi.
It would be nice to see the temperatures on the computer.


Would add a whole new sub-system to be "general public user
friendly". It would need a TCP/IP stack, web server and processor
capable of handling that. I suspect that these cheap weather

stations
just have a "weather station chip" rather than a GP processor
suitably programmed.


Maybe a Bluetooth chip?


Well it would provide the radio part but you'd still need a processor
capable of running a TCP/IP stack and webserver. One could dispense
with teh web server and use a host PC to establish a connections to
or from the Wx station to get the data and then provide the data
processing and web server but how many ordinary users have a web
server on their PC? To be useable for the masses the Wx station would
require to just coonect to the local lan configure itself and then be
contactable via a web interface.

LEDs, going dim, not heard of that, they temd to work or not work.

Do
you really mean LEDs? They tend to be power hungry and all the
weather stations I have seen have LCD displays. The latter can

lose
contrast with age, there *might* be a contrast adjustment inside.


Could perfectly well be LCD displays.
I'm not too clear on the difference.


LEDs are Light Emmiting Diodes, they emit light from the segments
that make up a character or indicator. LCDs reley on a reflective
backing and or a backlight that illuminates the entire display area
with the segments appear black against the backlight. Some LCD
displays are the inverse, a generally black background through which
the black shows for the charcter segments.

Is there any way of reviving an ancient LCD display?


There might be a contrast adjustment inside the unit.

--
Cheers
Dave.