Ron,
I would like to know a couple of things if it wouldn't be too much trouble. When X10 ping does its thing, what and how does it ping? I am familiar with pinging IP addresses from one computer to other devices on a computer network but when reading about X10 ping I wasn't sure this was what they were talking about. I think what they were saying was X10 pings an IP address and if it gets no response in a perset number of pings it toggles the X10 module off and on to reset the device it is controlling. Is this correct?
The other computers you referred to laptops and desktops causing major noise city, are they under your control? What types of X10 modules were you trying to control? Depending on your answers to these questions, and a little work on your part, I think we can resolve your situation and have you receiving your emails all the time.
My motto is you only fail when you quit trying!
Till Later,
Bob
Sure,
When you setup x10 ping you tell it what IP to ping, what House and unit code you need to power cycle upon ping failure and some options like how many ping failures to allow before cycling power and how long to wait after doing so before checking for ping replys again.
I told it to ping my mail server's outside or public address, If it cannot then the router or dsl modem need restarting. This happens for various reasons where I live. X10 ping will try 5 times, then turn the H/C off (An appliance controller attached to a power strip the all these goodies are pluged into). Then after a second or so it turns the H/C back on, then it waits sufficient time for the units to come back up before checking again.
It works very well for this. I ran into issues where my appliance controller would not respond to commands from anything as different pc where plugged into AC buss bars along benches in the same room. (The lab). BTW it's a two room office with a small front office area and lab in the back where the servers, dsl stuff and work benches are.
So I punted the idea and am waiting for more enthusiasm before I tackle the problem.
The computers I have in my lab are dropped off by customers with virus/slowness issues mostly and the occasional bad power supply or motherboard. They come and go all day and God willing, every day.
I could get a bunch of filters but it is a Mom and Pop shop and my wife is a tech too and I don't really want to put the pressure on her to keep my x10 "hobby" happy. Tech or not, she shruges at new x10 deployments until she relys on it. And she will, she will.
Chasing the interference bunny down rabbit holes is no fun and expensive. I just had a taste of it at home and more or less have it under control at least.
:Ron