![]() It will connect and start playing, you can ' stop', ' play' again or even ' clear' playlist and ' add' again in order to connect to another airport stream ![]() Send a VLC command via telnet with this converted URL, example: ' add ' Start VLC in telnet interface mode (once, let it run all the time)Įstablish a telnet session from this 'server script' or plugin to the VLC telnet port (on localhost - on same PC, port 4212) The ' server script' or plugin will translate the frequency into the URL needed (for VLC later), from a mapping list (hash table) as KnownFrequency-to-URL translation I tried: it worksĬ) have a small script based X-Plane-external 'server program', or write a LUA script, X-Plane SDK plugin which will do these actions:Įnable and get the DATAREF sim/cockpit/radios/com1_freq_hz (and/or others) from X-Plane, as direct plugin or as network connection to this external 'server script' (e.g. ![]() How to use in X-Plane, with a hardware radio control panel or settings on cockpit radio?īesides legal issues - LiveATC their web site - technically not difficult.Īnyway, how 'cool' would it be to control the radio (set frequency, toggle) in SIM cockpit and to listen to LiveATC for this frequency.Ī) use VLC media player: it has a great telnet interface where you can 'add' a connection to the LiveATC serverī) just use the direct URL to the LiveATC server, not the web site URL: you can find it in the web site page source. Besides X-ATC-Chatter, LiveTraffic or PilotEdge, I was also thinking:
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