4 {application} provides voice announcements during
5 flight so that you can keep your eyes on the
6 sky and still get information about the
7 current flight status. However, sometimes you
8 don't want to hear them.
11 Turns all voice announcements on and off
14 Plays a short message allowing you to verify
15 that the audio system is working and the volume settings
21 {application} logs all telemetry data and saves all
22 flash data to this directory. This
23 directory is also used as the staring point
24 when selecting data files for display or
27 Click on the directory name to bring up a
28 directory choosing dialog, select a new
29 directory and click 'Select Directory' to
30 change where {application} reads and writes data
36 This value is transmitted in each command
37 packet sent from TeleDongle and received from
38 an altimeter. It is not used in telemetry
39 mode, as the callsign configured in the
40 altimeter board is included in all telemetry
41 packets. Configure this with the {application}
42 operators call sign as needed to comply with
43 your local radio regulations.
45 Note that to successfully command a flight
46 computer over the radio (to configure the
47 altimeter, monitor idle, or fire pyro
48 charges), the callsign configured here must
49 exactly match the callsign configured in the
50 flight computer. This matching is case
56 This switches between metric units (meters)
57 and imperial units (feet and miles). This
58 affects the display of values use during
59 flight monitoring, configuration, data
60 graphing and all of the voice
61 announcements. It does not change the units
62 used when exporting to CSV files, those are
63 always produced in metric units.
67 This causes all communication with a connected
68 device to be dumped to the console from which
69 {application} was started. If you've started it from
70 an icon or menu entry, the output will simply
71 be discarded. This mode can be useful to debug
72 various serial communication issues.
76 Selects the set of fonts used in the flight
77 monitor window. Choose between the small,
78 medium and large sets.
82 Switches between the available Java user
83 interface appearances. The default selection
84 is supposed to match the native window system
85 appearance for the target platform.
89 Selects the initial position for the main
90 {application} window that includes all of the
96 Sets the number of map 'tiles' kept in memory
97 while the application is running. More tiles
98 consume more memory, but will make panning
99 around the map faster.
103 ==== Manage Frequencies
105 This brings up a dialog where you can
106 configure the set of frequencies shown in the
107 various frequency menus. You can add as many
108 as you like, or even reconfigure the default
109 set. Changing this list does not affect the
110 frequency settings of any devices, it only
111 changes the set of frequencies shown in the