As you may have seen in the recent times there is very little action here. Changes in life includes changes in hobbies and now it time to have a look on this blog and future of it.
Quick recap
From day one this was meant to be a place for myself to keep snippets and simple how-to notes for my Jeti transmitter. It did however quite quick change form to “Jeti advice to all, even when you thought you didn’t need them”. And it’s been fun, really fun.
Lua and coding
In practice I could not program absolutely anything before this. Still can’t, but that did not stop me to learning basics of lua and since I have no self-preservation or shame I posted the so-called apps here. And you used them, liked them, commented them. And I liked that, so merry go around I guess. (Trivia, first lua “app” was released ten years ago!)
Sensors
Oh boy. That was a journey. To my absolute surprise those became quite popular. If even a fraction percentage of downloaded sets have resulted in a built sensor it will be a huge amount. As expected, if you build models you also can build some sensors, and those you built!
Phoenix Sim
It would be unfair to not include Phoenix in this post. It is a good, basic flying sim working with almost any PC. It is the reason for this website needing a “more than cheapest server” for as long as Phoenix been here. And this from amount of downloads alone. I still did not want to take it down, I’m still getting thanks for the Phoenix on monthly basis so there still is use for that.
What will happen in practice?
Very little, actually:
- Lua-apps and sensors are published under MIT license, feel free to utilize that
- I will stop all support for my published Lua-apps and sensors
- I will remove contact-page and will not answer any questions on lua-app, sensors or Phoenix Sim.
- Webpage as such will be kept technically updated, no new content is to be expected
Thank you!
It truly has been a blast—thank you all for being part of the journey!
Best regards, Tero from RCT

