With another trip rapidly approaching, and this one absolutely guaranteed to have some craziness in it (we’re planning on off-roading a 2wd car…), we decided we’d better figure out some recording equipment better than just our iPhones, and something that we could easily record a lot of high quality footage with that would in turn encourage us to keep the camera rolling where otherwise the iPhone would have just gone into the pocket and missed out on a lot of things. This was spurred on by the fact that I recently upgraded the software on mine, and no-longer have a jailbreak installed. We have some serious issues transferring video off our iPhones on the toughbook without using iFunBox (some software that allows filesystem access), and so we’re now in the situation where we have no way of recording video during the trips.

We spent a lot of time going back and forth on which camcorder would be best, and even went and had a look at some in a local Currys, but really, until you put in an SD card and hit record, you have no idea how it will turn out based solely off that little LCD screen, and certainly for us with an investment so large we tend to do a lot of research first. So, this morning, the idea suddenly occurred to me to walk into Currys, buy one of their SD cards, and then walk across to the other side of the shop and try out a few different camcorders that we had contemplated.

There were many “Full HD” models, with lots of different price levels, so we grabbed some test footage from the following:

  1. JVC Everio GZ-HM301BEK @£179.99
  2. Panasonic HDC-SD41 @£199.99
  3. Canon Legria HF R205 @£229.99
  4. Panasonic HDC-SD90 @£429.99

As soon as I was home, I set about putting the footage together into a workable comparison video that we could throw up on YouTube, both to help others who are in the same position as us, and so that Azemute could take a look:

It immediately became clear which one is best (the Panasonic HDC-SD90), and in side-by-side comparison, the others look downright amateur in terms of quality, but then at almost double the price of the Canon, one does tend to expect a slightly better offering; the SD90 also has the added bonus of a hot-shoe for either spot-lamps or microphones, and a separate mic-in port which would allow us to use radio mics in the future. It’s truly a magnificent example of what a high-end consumer/low-end prosumer hybrid should be.

So now, we have to figure out exactly how we’re going to afford to pay for an SD90 and the upcoming trip, but hopefully it’ll be worth it in terms of the quality level of the videos we’re able to put out (yes, we’re fully aware of how bad the iPhone video is). The donate button is over on the right if you feel like helping us, and we’ll happily put you on the Sponsors page too ;-)!

 

After two weeks of miserable rain, we’ve finally got some sun: and what better way to celebrate than to plan for your next hairbrained adventure across mountainous Scottish countryside? Even with the almost unbelievable success of our last trip, we still had some… *ahem* criticisms that needed to get worked out before we could set off again.

Firstly, and foremost, sleeping arrangements. Now, granted, the weather may have not exactly been favourable (Wales is not necessarily known for its sunny and tropical climate, especially in March), but our choice in tent the last time was less than stellar. Of course price was a major contributing factor, and tents tend to be fairly expensive, but with the coming of the next trip that had to change. So on Sunday, we went out and  investigated some tents and other tenting supplies. The major issue I had with our last tent mostly surrounded the fact I didn’t even fit in it diagonally, so obviously overall length was a major player in the decision making process. In the end, we had some success at a local Cotswolds where a very helpful sales guy gave us quite a bit of information and even set us up with almost exactly the right piece of kit. I still have some size concerns, but that’s just my overarching pessimism. For the time being, I think it’s infinitely more suitable for our needs and the price is right too.

Secondly, some technology changes are afoot: In keeping with our minimalist navigation techniques, I was hoping to have some manner of GPS device at hand that would be more suitable than a phone. Obviously a typical car-mounted GPS is out of the question (as it would provide navigation support) so I decided to look into more traditional hand-held units. After some crafty searching I think I’ve found the right device and it’s straight out of the 90′s. Infact, it looks almost identical to the first GPS unit I remember my dad bringing home when I was much younger. From the spec sheets it sports a glorious 64 x 128 px display (I think I’ve owned watches with higher resolutions) and *ahem* “500 waypoints, 20 routes, 10 track logs with a maximum of 10,000 datapoints each”… really, this is the future. That said, it also gets nearly 24h on a single set of AA batteries and is waterproof, oh and it costs less than £70! Sounds good to me.

Finally our Toughbook, having survived our last trip pretty much unscathed, has had some fairly subtle modifications applied: I’ve yanked its awful Intel wireless network adapter out (it was causing all sorts of troubles and crashing the machine) and replaced it with a Broadcom model. Pretty good price, does everything we need  and seems several leagues more reliable. I also took the liberty of permanently disconnecting the built in GPRS sled (yes, I know, we worked so hard to get that working) but it was just draining power for effectively no reason and would turn on at very annoying times. I have tentative plans to replace it with a couple USB jacks and perhaps a built in GPS module that I found as an upgrade kit, but that’s a project for a much later date.

Until next time, clear skies and smooth sailing.

 

Packing.

Exciting stuff.

Four hours of it is also a lot to process, especially when there’s some debate over just how much junk you need to haul around: sure you CAN take the kitchen sink, but do you really need it? In the end I think we reached a pretty good compromise of weight to volume (mostly achieved through the liberal discarding of packaging and lots of ‘spatial orientation/engineering’ as a friend of mine would have put it).

In the end, I think the results sort of show for themselves; and are a bit revealing. I plan on keeping a log of what we make use of (and what we don’t) so that we can refine the toolkit we are brining, but really I do think we did quite well.

Only time will tell whether our efforts are worth it.

Tomorrow we’re off at 8, so from there on out we’re set.

 

 

GPRS Shenanigans:

On the european version of the toughbook cf-29 (or in fact any model), there exists approximately zero information about the WWAN Sled that was available for it.  The things you can find on the panasonic website (intentional lower-casing of their name due to a complete reduction of any respect whatsoever for a company that fails miserably at product support) are useless.

The modem part of the sled in europe is a Siemens.  The problem is, with so many different variants, many different possibilities for presentation to windows arise.

Our CF-29E shipped with a Sled containing a Siemens MC45 GPRS modem (I think originally from a CF-29C, which will screw you over big time with “This is NOT SUPPORT” messages… due to exactly 2 letters difference in an alphabet.  Bravo Panasonic, bravo).  This requires a somewhat different version of CheckNet to work.

This zip file (Checknet-2.11L10D-2kxp-nonlogo-M-web.zip) is the one you need, and includes the multiplexing software required to combine COM7 & COM8 into a useful virtual COM port that CheckNet can actually interface with.

The complexity of setting up something as ridiculously basic as GPRS doesn’t quite stop there.  Oh no.  Now you must map a modem to the virtual COM port that maps to the real COM ports that talk to the Sled.

I’m going to just link to the Engrish PDF here, because it explains it adequately.

Feel free to comment if you have questions… I mean… I only spent 17 hours trying to make this work, so I think I learned a few things along the way.  Also, major thanks and props to Toughbook at the Notebook Review forums for mentioning several things in several posts that gave me clues to make sense of sheer chaos.

© 2012 OneLastTrip.net Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha