Difference: HdrDisplay (3 vs. 4)

Revision 42007-12-12 - AllanRempel

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Dolby DR-37P Standard Operating Procedures

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This document describes Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that should be followed for the Brightside/Dolby DR-37P HDR display located at the time of this writing in ICICS X521.
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This document describes Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that should be followed for the Brightside/Dolby DR-37P HDR display located at the time of this writing in ICICS X521. It should be updated as new information becomes available.
 
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If you have any questions about this display, please contact the following people in this order:
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At no time should anyone other than the keepers of the display do anything with the display without the authorization of one of the keepers. Anyone who has questions or concerns about this display should contact one of these keepers in the following order:
 
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  When the temperatures hit the 60s or 70s, exercise caution and keep an eye on them. When they hit the 80s, you should take steps to reduce the temperatures by either restarting or increasing the speed of the pump, setting the 8-bit+ mode, ensuring there is coolant in the reservoir, or terminating the display of bright images. If 8-bit+ mode is on and the pump is running, then terminating the display of bright images should cause a dramatic decrease in temperature. The last option of course is to power down the display.
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There is probably a hard cutoff somewhere that shuts off the display when the temperatures get too high. Wolfgang and Allan experienced this around Dec/06 - Jan/07 while looking at sequences of bright images for the SIGGRAPH paper. Allan doesn't recall seeing the temperatures get into the 90s, so the cutoffs are probably somewhere around 90.
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There is probably a hard cutoff somewhere that shuts off the LEDs when the temperatures get too high. Wolfgang and Allan experienced this around Dec/06 - Jan/07 while looking at sequences of bright images for the SIGGRAPH paper. Allan doesn't recall seeing the temperatures get into the 90s, so the cutoffs are probably somewhere around 90. This happened prior to our understanding of the overheating problem, so it's likely that following these SOPs will help prevent such a situation from happening again.
 

Power down procedure

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  Users of the display who also have active accounts at Dolby can access the Dolby SVN server (elmo.dolby.net) and do code development with the following process.
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Prior to the move of Dolby Canada from 1310 Kootenay to 2985 Virtual Way, elmo was accessible via brightsidetech.dyndns.org which was easily accessible under a variety of platforms (PC, Mac, Linux) from a variety of locations. But since the move, access has been much more restricted. elmo is now elmo.dolby.net and is only visible when a VPN session with Dolby is started, which is now only possible on the PC platform. To start it, set Internet Explorer to vpn.dolby.net and log in with your dolby username and password. Now you can find elmo.dolby.net. It is not necessary to click the Start button for Network Connect in the Client Application Sessions section of the Instant Virtual Extranet page that comes up, and in fact if you do click it you will lose internet connectivity to anywhere outside of Dolby (e.g. you will lose all UBC access).
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Prior to the move of Dolby Canada from 1310 Kootenay to 2985 Virtual Way, elmo was accessible as brightsidetech.dyndns.org which was easily accessible under a variety of platforms (PC, Mac, Linux) from a variety of locations. But since the move, access has been much more restricted. elmo is now elmo.dolby.net and is only visible when a VPN session with Dolby is started, which is now only possible on the PC platform. To start it, set Internet Explorer to vpn.dolby.net and log in with your dolby username and password. Now you can find elmo.dolby.net. It is not necessary to click the Start button for Network Connect in the Client Application Sessions section of the Instant Virtual Extranet page that comes up, and in fact if you do click it you will lose internet connectivity to anywhere outside of Dolby (e.g. you will lose all UBC access).
  Prior to late Dec/07, it was possible to use Firefox to access vpn.dolby.net. At that time, after logging in, you would need to click "Allow" in a popup window that would come up in order to have access to elmo. But as of the beginning of Dec/07 it seems now that only IE will run Dolby's VPN.
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  where username is your username on elmo (which might be different than your Dolby username) and repository is the name of the repository you want (e.g. thirdparty, code, brightview). E.g. regarding usernames, my elmo username is "allan" while my Dolby username is "aremp". This might only apply to employees with elmo accounts before Dolby bought Brightside, if all new employees are automatically given accounts on elmo that match their Dolby usernames.
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DR37-P_HDR_Viewer_Software_Manual.pdf:

 -- AllanRempel - 29 Nov 2007
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