Tom_OrbXF Posted December 6, 2017 Report Posted December 6, 2017 Hi, Looking at designing a show on PC with WYSIWYG. Absolute beginner to networking so if anyone could talk me through the process that would be great. Not sure whether I will do it all on 1 PC or on 2 separate machines, so If you could explain both that would be great! Using an Orb XF and most current WYSIWYG (R39) Thanks Guys Quote
Jon Hole Posted December 7, 2017 Report Posted December 7, 2017 Hi Tom, Simplest option is to just output Art-Net or streaming ACN from the ORB XF straight into WYSIWYG. This can't be done from Phantom ZerOS unless you purchase the "Phantom ZerOS Unlock Dongle". If you don't need to use WYSIWYG, and can use Capture instead, we have demo showfiles (for both your laptop and the ORB XF), along with PDF instructions, available to download here: http://eatonfilesharing.box.com/Zero88. You can use Phantom ZerOS free of charge using CITP. Let us know the setup and we can give you more specific information. Jon Quote Jon Hole Global Product Manager, Systems and Control
Tom_OrbXF Posted December 8, 2017 Author Report Posted December 8, 2017 Thanks for your reply, Potentially I do go down the Capture route, my current job means I don't always have access to the desk so to be able to program with the phantom would be useful. A couple more questions if that is ok. Will I notice any massive differences between capture and WYSIWYG or are they fairly comparable? What is CITP? My Set up will probably be one laptop running it all (Visualiser and Phantom) when travelling, 2 separate machines one running Phantom, one the visualiser when at home, then console and visualiser in the venue (If it is easy enough to interchange between those operation modes) Thanks Quote
Jon Hole Posted December 8, 2017 Report Posted December 8, 2017 29 minutes ago, Tom_OrbXF said: Will I notice any massive differences between capture and WYSIWYG or are they fairly comparable? They're different, but both aiming to achieve the same end result. You can download a demo version of Capture (which works for 90 minutes and then needs to be restarted, and doesn't allow you to save) to see if you like it - http://www.capturesweden.com/ What is CITP? CITP stands for "Controller Interface Transport Protocol" - it's an Ethernet based "protocol" that allows consoles to talk to visualisers etc. It was originally developed by the team at Capture, but it open for anyone to use. There is more info here: http://www.citp-protocol.org/ My Set up will probably be one laptop running it all (Visualiser and Phantom) when travelling, 2 separate machines one running Phantom, one the visualiser when at home, then console and visualiser in the venue (If it is easy enough to interchange between those operation modes) Yes, that should be easy. Phantom ZerOS uses networks setup through Windows, so to change IP addresses etc, you do this through Windows, and then just select the IP address in Phantom. If using the same laptop, you can choose the 127.0.0.1 IP address. Quote Jon Hole Global Product Manager, Systems and Control
Tom_OrbXF Posted December 10, 2017 Author Report Posted December 10, 2017 Thanks, If I am using 2 devices what should I be setting my IP addresses to? Can't seem to get them to talk to each other! I have linked them with a Cat5 cable, opened phatom on one and capture on the other. Then enabled Art-Net. Am I missing a step there? Thanks Quote
Edward Z88 Posted December 11, 2017 Report Posted December 11, 2017 Hi Tom, Have you got a Phantom Unlock Dongle plugged in to the laptop running Phantom and ensured that the ArtNet settings match those on Capture? (for example a matching Universe for each port). What are the IP addresses and subnets of the 2 laptops? I would set one to be: 2.1.1.10 (subnet of 255.0.0.0). and the other to be: 2.1.1.20 (subnet of 255.0.0.0). Have you tried plugging both laptops into an Ethernet switch, rather than directly into the other laptop? On Phantom, in Setup (SHIFT + F10) under "Network Devices" do you see the Capture Laptop appear? Kind regards Edward Quote Edward Smith Product Specialist Email Support
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