What are people using iPad pros mounting them on for viewing while flying?
I use the Inspire 1 mount.
What are people using iPad pros mounting them on for viewing while flying?
The Mini 4 and iPadPro are significantly brighter than their predecessors, approaching 700-800 nits.
You are correct about the Mini 4. However, the iPadPro is, in fact, brighter at 511 nits peak brightness. Still, I can't stress enough all the other compromises required to get the 1000 or 2000 nit brightness of the CrystalSky tablets. Screen size is everything, and iOS is King in the DJI world. Using a hood or throwing a dark cloth over your head, or just flying from the shade of a golf umbrella will let you use any iPad in direct sunlight and the 9.7" ones are larger and lighter than any CrystalSky tablet, and FPV goggles are another option. Android will always be DJI's step-child, relegated to inferior programmers, and inadequate resources. DJI has built their business around iOS and Apple, and devotes the bulk of their programming resources to the iOS platform. Android copies eventually follow the Apple iOS innovation. Witness the cram down mandatory Android update which stripped out all the Google Maps, and was caused by a bug in the Android programming that was causing crashes. iOS users had no such issues.IPad 4 Pro Mini weighs in at 450 nits which is currently the brightest iPad display currently available. I get about 6ish hours of uninterrupted use before it requires a charge.
Until Apple starts building smart devices using OLED and adding extra battery capacity; we're either stuck with lackluster brightness in direct sunlight to preserve battery life, or, we will have to live with severely short battery life from displays amped up to 1000 or so nits. Can't have it both ways.
OLED is an improvement (as of now) but only reduces power consumption by 25%.
Everyone is forgetting that in order to use this CrytalSky tablet, you must use a dedicated version of Android DJI GO 4 created for the CrystalSky monitor. DJI has proven that their Android programmers are not up to the task, with the P4P+. It has been a disaster since Day 1. Even now, the finally updated P4P+ version of the app still crashes, while I have never had a crash on the P4P on iOS. Think twice before you leap into this Android pit, just for a slightly brighter screen that will never be as large as a 9.7" iPadPro. Largest size is still 7.85". Extra weight from an internal battery, and a thick screen to support the HDMI port, and no ability to run any third party SDK! Beware!![]()
the clearer and brighter the display. The backlight can be turned off in sunlight. I'll take some pictures and post them later today.
In what sense?Do you trust that dji is capable of making a tablet more powerful than an Apple product?
Outdoor visibility.What does this offer that the (almost) ubiquitous iPad doesn't have? Can it run myriad other apps?
Imagine a display that, the brighter the sunlight, the sharper and clearer the display, contrast, color saturation, etc.This is the same technology used in Garmin (and most other) handheld GPS units. I have no idea why it hasn't made its way to tablets.
Incorrect. There is at least one LCD display technology that, the brighter the sun, the brighter, clearer, and higher contrast the display. See the Garmin eTrex Vista.Nothing is brighter than the Sun. Most of the time it is still necessary to use a sun hood even with brightest screen on the market (P4P+ screen). Thus, brightness is not the only parameter and a working tablet + a good sun hood are currently the best option for me.
In what sense?
Since it is a dedicated application, it only needs to be "powerful" enough to run the DJI app(s), which in my expert opinion is not much "power" at all.
Nothing going on in DJI GO is very compute-intensive by today's multicore processors. The reason many Android platforms struggle has nothing to do with being underpowered -- it has everything to do with a multitasking environment with multiple apps and services competing for the same hardware resources. This is not a problem on iPads, as they are not multitasking.
An "open" platform like Android has pros and cons because of that openness. Many apps are poorly written, do not follow established practices for playing nicely in a multitasking environment. Unfortunately, far too often some of the bloatware that manufacturers and vendors put on Android devices are just these sorts of poorly written apps.
As I've said in other threads, if you have to technical know-how to clean up an Android installation, it can run circles around an iOS equivalent device. That's not practical for most people, however, so most should go with Apple products for use with DJI.
If you do have the technical sophistication to root an Android device, remove the offending bloatware, and tune system settings appropriately, you can get a great display solution for a fraction of the price of an iPad that will work just as well.
you have to think of this as a monitor not a tablet
@jakobe75 , I agree for the most part with your analysis (where I differ isn't important enough to debate).
What I keep coming back to is, where's my tablet (Android, iOS, Windows Mobile, I don't really care for this application) with the Garmin eTrex Vista display technology?
This would solve ALL visibility problems. And I really mean SOLVE.
Yeah, I was a big fan of these devices before GPS became ubiquitous in, well, everything. I think my toothbrush has GPS nowI still use my garmin in the jeep for off road trails. It is top notch navigation and postioining and easy to load poi coordinates. Its maybe 5+ years old and works flawlessly. The display is bright and crisp and it auto switches to a flat basic display at night. This is better than googlemaps. (Although gmaps is fastrrband smarter). I thought about adding a topo 3rd party firmware but never got around to it. The main reason I keep this device is because of the display. Battery is still going strong after all these years too!
How about the goggles??
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