Oh, you mean a reflective film! Duh. Um, yeah you’d have to I suppose. But then you also want a resistive touch screen. A capacitive might work through the film, but depending on the material on the film, you may run into issues.
Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Posts
-
RE: Touch Screen Monitor With Two Way Mirror Film
-
RE: Releasing stable
Hrm, I have one of those but it’s currently in service for something else. Rats. Should probably get another one anyway (and another rPi-3 as well.) But, that makes me wonder if it’s simply software that needs updating …
-
RE: Releasing stable
@MichMich, unfortunately I can’t reproduce that. I’m using my own private Google calendar and it loads just fine.
-
RE: Notifications .... only for tacos!
Yep, gone. But … how does this translate to chemistry? School work first! :)
-
RE: Where to buy good two way mirrors ?
In the US, we simply go to a glass shop. Same place that would make custom glass sizes for things like windows, tables, even car windshields …
-
RE: Notifications .... only for tacos!
Yeah, you do that. It’s a single click to dismiss it. Not a huge deal. I think I’m going to do some laser cutting today … got some home remodeling going on so I need something to distract me. :)
-
RE: Touch Screen Monitor With Two Way Mirror Film
Personally I would recommend getting an actual touch screen monitor for this, rather than using a film. The film will scratch over time and you will end up having to replace it, whereas the panel on the monitor is made from stronger and better materials. You can either look for a touch screen monitor, or you can also buy a touch screen “screen”, a separate piece that simply overlays over the monitor, and communicates with the computer (or in this case, the raspberry) through other means, be it USB or Serial.
As for what type you should use, consider watching this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=da8HYxdFI1k
-
RE: Calendar event dates enhancement
Correct, there will never be that one perfect solution for everyone, however that’s what I like about adding in configurable options so each person can do it their own way.
As for the problems, my take on that is that one will always have bugs crop up. Technology changes, web sites will rewrite their code that we might rely on, there won’t ever be a time where you write something once and never ever change it again. Eventually Time will catch up and something has changed, forcing you to do the same.
My suggestion is to do what’s possible, fix what’s easily fixable (including some of the easy requests), release the thing. Let future bugs be exactly that: future bugs. Address them as they come up.
-
RE: Releasing stable
Besides the Facebook issues, with else is wrong with the Calendar module?
