Difference between revisions of "WiDig-800 QuickStart Windows"

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On Windows, configuration of the WiDig must be done through USB, or using the [[WiDig-800_QuickStart_WidiBud|Widi Bud adapter]].  
 
On Windows, configuration of the WiDig must be done through USB, or using the [[WiDig-800_QuickStart_WidiBud|Widi Bud adapter]].  
  
It is however possible to receive sensor data on a Windows 10 computer with a generic BLE interface once it is configured in Standalone mode in EditorX.
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To receive sensor data with a generic BLE interface once it is configured in Standalone mode with EditorX, the computer must run Windows 10.
  
 
You will need:
 
You will need:

Revision as of 18:50, 19 October 2018

WiDig BLE on Windows

On Windows, configuration of the WiDig must be done through USB, or using the Widi Bud adapter.

To receive sensor data with a generic BLE interface once it is configured in Standalone mode with EditorX, the computer must run Windows 10.

You will need:

- A WiDig configured in Standalone mode, and USB power source

- loopMIDI virtual MIDI application

- MIDIBerry BLE to MIDI bridge application (Windows 10 only)

Also, we need to route the BLE MIDI port to a virtual MIDI port, hence the need for loopMIDI.

Pairing the WiDig

Go to system Settings->Bluetooth & Other Devices, and click on add:


Widig win10 bluetooth add.png


Then, select the WiDig device:


Widig win10 bluetooth select.png


Connect to the device (If it fails once, try again and eventually it should connect):


Widig win10 bluetooth ready.png


Make sure loopMIDI is running and there is at least one virtual port available:


Widig win10 loopMIDI.png


Finally, open MIDIBerry and select the WiDig as input, and the "MIDI" virtual device as output.

Now, you will be able to access WiDig sensor data from any MIDI application via the virtual loopMIDI port!


Widig win10 midiberry.png