Still looking - Solaris drivers for GPIB board.

D

Dave

Guest
I am still looking for the Solaris (SPARC) drivers for a PCI based
National Instruments GPIB board. Anyone have them spare?

This is for a *home* project (not a professional one), comparing one
oscillator (quarts) against another (rubidium) for stability. As such, I
am unable to justify the cost of the drivers from National Instruments.

(They are more expensive than the card, although I did not buy the card
new. In fact, if I was to buy the drivers new, they would cost me more
than the card and the time inerval counter I will use to compare the two
oscillators).

I'm sure someone must have them sitting around and not using them. I've
looked on eBay, but have drawn a blank.

If you can help in any way, please drop me an email to:

http://www.southminster-branch-line.org.uk/myemail.jpg
 
In article <4291FFAB.5040404@nowhere.com>, nospam@nowhere.com says...

If you can help in any way, please drop me an email to:

http://www.southminster-branch-line.org.uk/myemail.jpg
I've tried sending email to .jpgs before, but Adriana Lima still won't
reply. I think she's avoiding me.

-- jm

------------------------------------------------------
http://www.qsl.net/ke5fx
Note: My E-mail address has been altered to avoid spam
------------------------------------------------------
 
"Dave" <nospam@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:4291FFAB.5040404@nowhere.com...

This is for a *home* project (not a professional one), comparing one
oscillator (quarts) against another (rubidium) for stability. As such, I
am unable to justify the cost of the drivers from National Instruments.
Resign, Go with the flow:

Get the absolute cheapest Windows XP PeeCee that can possibly run the Card,
VIA Epia f.ex. are Neat, or steal one out of a dumpster.

Set up a suitable proxy to run the card over TCP/IP, hide the Win-XP box
somewhere where it cannot be seen from the Solaris box and pretend to be
pure in spirit.
 
In article <1116964283.649297.219790@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com>,
<rmeenaks@olf.com> wrote:
Does this help?

http://www.esrf.fr/computing/expg/subgroups/icntl/guides/io/gpib/nilan.html
Isn't that software for controling a $500 piece of external hardware that
comes from National Instruments? The hardware looks to me like an
Ethernet to HPIB bridge.

< http://sine.ni.com/nips/cds/view/p/lang/en/nid/2421 >

carl
--
carl lowenstein marine physical lab u.c. san diego
clowenst@ucsd.edu
 
Frithiof Andreas Jensen wrote:
"Dave" <nospam@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:4291FFAB.5040404@nowhere.com...


This is for a *home* project (not a professional one), comparing one
oscillator (quarts) against another (rubidium) for stability. As such, I
am unable to justify the cost of the drivers from National Instruments.


Resign, Go with the flow:

Get the absolute cheapest Windows XP PeeCee that can possibly run the Card,
VIA Epia f.ex. are Neat, or steal one out of a dumpster.

Set up a suitable proxy to run the card over TCP/IP, hide the Win-XP box
somewhere where it cannot be seen from the Solaris box and pretend to be
pure in spirit.



Thanks, but none of this is necessary now - I found the drivers in
Labview will work independatly of it, so I'm not tied to using labview,
although I might well learn that for future use. But someone sent me a
bit of C code to control the instrument I have, and it seems to work OK
(after a few changes, as he used OpenBSD, and I'm using Solaris).
 

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