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Date:      Tue, 9 Nov 1999 11:43:19 -0800 (PST)
From:      Joss Roots <osiris2002@yahoo.com>
To:        Michael Rothenberg <rothenberg@automationonline.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Patient Monitoring (NO FreeBSD really)
Message-ID:  <19991109194319.26350.rocketmail@web118.yahoomail.com>

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Hi there.
Thanks very much foor your reply.
I'll try to contact the Tech assistance
and will look into their user manual
and may have a chat with our maintenance people

meanwhiles, your answer seams to be coming from 
a pro, so I might need your help later on.
By the do you have any working code doing 
the things you described.
thanks again.

--- Michael Rothenberg
<rothenberg@automationonline.com> wrote:
> the following is not really related to FreeBSD:
> 
> The first thing you really need to do is call
> all the equipment
> manufacturers and determine if their machines
> are capable of outputting data
> through the serial port in the first place.
> Dont waste your time if they
> dont even have the capability to squirt info
> out the ports. A lot of
> equipment will have some capability to get
> instantaneous values. HP will
> probably use GPIB (look at local engineering
> book store for info or WWW) if
> anything at all, but I am not sure about the
> others.
> 
> If the machine can talk, then get a detailed
> description of the command
> structure (protocol) and what kind of response
> you should expect to get for
> each command. Usually each command will have
> some kind of response to tell
> you it was received and acted upon or the
> response will hold the data you
> asked for in some format. If you skip talking
> to the sales people and get in
> with the tech support engineers they usually
> will send you anything you
> need. Few sales people really know the machines
> to this kind of level.
> 
> Once you receive the info on the commands you
> have available to you, you can
> make a determination as to if you can get the
> data you want out of the
> machine. Usually, you wont get live feeds from
> the machine and will have to
> poll it every few 100 ms or so (for windoze
> anyway). You can poll as fast as
> your comm setup will allow, but its usually
> pretty slow like 2400/9600 baud.
> Newer machines sometimes get up to 19.2.
> 
> This means you wont have true 'real time' but
> its kinda close enough for
> most applications. Medical might be different
> though. Lots of rules there.
> If you are only displaying the data and
> tracking it without the
> responsibility of acting on it then you might
> not have much to worry about.
> 
> I have never done a system like this in
> FreeBSD. Only that windos stuff. On
> win systems its a piece of cake with any number
> of 3rd party comm libraries
> so I expect it wont be that hard on FBSD either
> once you find the code. Of
> course, getting the data is usually the easy
> part. Once you get the data you
> have to figure out what to do with it and thats
> the fun part!!
> 
> Enjoy!
> 
> -Michael
> 
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Michael Rothenberg
> Systems Engineer
> 617.354.3830 ph
> Intelligent Automation Systems Inc.            
>             617.547.9727 fx
> Cambridge, MA, U.S.                            
>  www.automationonline.com
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
> 
> 


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