New? Nah not really new, although it is now possible to control the line-out volume through ds/rotary/remote
I've seen a lot of binary copies of receiver.arf floating around the internet lately, which is understandable, since it's difficult to combine two tar files on a windows platform. Because I was also guilty in distributing some binary copies over email, I created a patch utility for win32 platforms that will combine the two tar files to generate a fully functioning new receiver.arf
it can be found
here
screen shots:
netscape
opera
internet explorer 5.5
INSTALLATION
- download zip files tarMerge.zip and receiver_patch.zip
- unzip. this will result in files tarMerge.exe and receiver_patch.arf
- stop Audio Receiver Manager Software on your PC (right-click on taskbar icon)
- start tarMerge
- select files:
Original tar-file : receiver.arf
"Patch" tar-file : receiver_patch.arf
Destination tar-file : receiver_new.arf
- click "Create patched tar-file"
- receiver_new.arf will be created
- rename receiver.arf to receiver_org.arf
- rename receiver_new.arf to receiver.arf
- restart Audio Receiver Manager Software
USAGE
- open webbrowser and use url :
http://[receiver ip]/receiver.html
- a java-applet should pop up showing your receiver
- push the buttons and rotary to operate
NOTES
- the kernel contains two modifications :
ir-codes can be sent to /dev/ir
the line-out volume is controllable by the rotary/remote (Jeff Mock's patch)
- this software doesn't work when using large databases
- there's a maximum of 1 session at a time. This was done because netscape tends to constantly open/close the network connection when resizing.
- tarMerge.exe should also work with other tar-files. This is untested though.
Have fun...