Bodymedia Port Devices Driver

by adam brown

The offending xHCI device was gone. I then proceeded with a cycle of restarting and re-enabling them one by one (with restarts and logins into Windows each time to check Device Manager). Once they were all re-enabled, the problem was gone from Device Manager and the touch screen worked again. Thanks a bunch for the fix. We have a Dell OptiPlex 3040 that is showing a Prolific USB-to-Serial Comm Port (COM3) in Device Manager and Devices and Printers. We have about 20 other workstations that are the same model with the same software and devices attached to them but this is the only one where that is showing.

For many people with diabetes, weight loss is often extremely difficult, especially given that certain diabetes medications like insulin can cause weight gain. As difficult as this process is, success is based on a simple principle: calories expended must exceed calories consumed. Most approaches to weight loss focus on the intake side by employing a calorie-restricted diet. While these are often effective, they typically neglect the other half of the weight loss equation, calories expended. At diaTribe this month, we had the opportunity to test a new consumer product that tracks calories burned on a minute-to-minute basis.

The BodyMedia FIT Weight Management System is astonishingly uncomplicated. The system consists of an armband monitor, an online activity manager, and an optional watch display. The armband monitor is a small, lightweight plastic device fitted into a flexible strap. It is worn on the back of the triceps and, according to the manufacturer, tracks calories burned throughout the day with 90% accuracy. The monitor uses four sensors to determine the number of calories burned, the number of steps taken, the total time spent in physical activity, and sleep duration/efficiency. These sophisticated sensors function by monitoring skin temperature, sweat, motion, and the rate at which heat is dissipating from the user’s body. In other words, the BodyMedia FIT system provides a vastly more complete picture of calorie burn, a tremendous improvement from overly simplistic pedometers and heart rate monitors or highly complicated lab calorimetry. The monitor itself simply gathers data, and it must be plugged into a PC or Mac to be recharged (a three-hour charge lasts five to seven days of steady use) and to analyze data.

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The final component of the system, and our favorite, is the optional display. Although it looks like an ordinary sports watch, the BodyMedia FIT display is more like a continuous glucose monitor for exercise. The display wirelessly receives information from the armband every minute, displaying calories burned, steps taken, and time spent in activity. With the push of the “View” button,” the user can choose to view today’s information, yesterday’s information, and target goals. The display also features a “trip-o-meter,” allowing the user to measure activity (including average per-minute rate of calorie burn) from a given start point. Finally, the display will alarm the wearer when daily goals (e.g., step count, minutes of moderate and vigorous activity) have been reached. In a cool twist, the watch display can be unscrewed from the watchband and clipped to a shirt, bag, or belt loop.

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Once it’s out of the box, the BodyMedia FIT system is set up on BodyMedia’s website, where the user enters parameters such as height, weight, bedtime, wake-up time, recent caloric intake, and weight loss goals into the online activity manager. These data are transferred to the armband monitor (via USB) before the user can wear the monitor and gather any data.p

Although at first, I felt like Inspector Gadget wearing my insulin pump, continuous glucose monitor, AND the BodyMedia FIT system, I soon forgot I had the device on. During workouts, the armband was quite comfortable, stable, and unobtrusive. The armband quickly air-dried after workouts, and didn’t retain any smells. Over the course of my test drive, I found it quite easy to wear the device for the maximum recommended 23 hours per day. Unfortunately, the armband is not completely waterproof and should not be immersed in water. Thus, I took it off while swimming and showering, but it was more than able to handle the 100+ degree summers of Phoenix.

Although at first, I felt like Inspector Gadget wearing my insulin pump, continuous glucose monitor, AND the BodyMedia FIT system, I soon forgot I had the device on.

I loved the ability to receive up-to-the-minute information from the BodyMedia FIT display. I proudly showed my whole family my personal record-setting day of calories burned. I also liked being able to use the trip-o-meter to track activity from a given start point, although I didn’t realize the system had this capability until after a week of using the device. During weightlifting workouts where I previously had no idea how many calories I was burning, it was great to finally get a feel for the intensity of my activity.

After gathering a few days of data, I was quite excited to upload the armband to BodyMedia’s online activity manager. The upload process was much easier than I expected, and I was soon looking at a sleek online interface. The “Summary” portal is the core of the online manager, showing information collected by the armband including calories burned, steps taken, and sleep duration. The graphical presentation, with the ability to sort by day(s) and time of day, were quite helpful. I also enjoyed the “Personal Bests” section of the online manager, which tracked my personal records for everything from calories burned and time wearing the device to sleep duration.

I really liked the idea of being able to track my sleeping habits, especially because there is so much emerging research about the importance of sleep. While I didn’t find the sleep efficiency statistic (time actually sleeping divided by time lying down) too useful, just seeing how many hours I slept each night definitely motivated me to get to bed earlier. Obviously, making use of this feature requires wearing the device while sleeping, which was actually much easier and more comfortable than one might think.

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The “Nutrition” section of the online activity manager attempts to tackle the other side of the calorie balance equation, but like any other meal logging system, is often laborious and frustrating. To start, I generally found it difficult to keep track of all the food I ate on a daily basis. When I did manage to write down my daily consumption, the system only sometimes had the exact thing I had eaten. Furthermore, remembering portion sizes and inputting them into the food log was tough, especially because the online manager uses portions that are often hard to conceptualize. However, I really appreciated the “Create Food” button, which allowed me to input the exact nutrition facts information from food labels. Obviously, entering food from restaurant meals into this system would be a guessing-game at best. For those who use a different calorie tracker or forgot to log food, BodyMedia FIT conveniently allows users to manually enter their caloric intake for the day. Although I wasn’t excited by the “Nutrition” part of the online manager, it’s probably on par with most others on the market – it’s just a hard thing to get right.

One important aspect of the BodyMedia system is the price; the armband is priced at $189.95, with the combined armband and display system costing $259.90. A subscription to the online manager is free for the first three months, with subsequent monthly dues ranging from $6.95 to $12.95 per month depending on the contract length. For those unwilling to shell out that much money, I found online calculators that approximated my calorie burn within 100-300 calories of the reading on my BodyMedia FIT system. Should you choose to use an online calculator, try to find one that uses the Mifflin St-Jeor equation, as this is the most accurate. We like the one on freedieting.com. That said, it’s pretty cool and motivational to see your minute-by-minute energy expenditure, and it’s informative to watch the changes in real-time or after the fact. As with continuous glucose monitoring, every day is different, and it’s really useful to have a device that can capture day-to-day variation over the long haul.

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In short, the BodyMedia FIT system is a great way to get more information about the weight loss process by understanding how many calories you burn in a given day and when you’re burning them. Although the system is on the pricy side, it is unobtrusive, user-friendly, and quite useful for those willing to put a little more time into the weight loss process or for those more>

Display device

Comfort

Ease of use

More information in the weight-loss process

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Recommendations and Improvements

  • Expensive (and required subscription)

  • Food logging system can be frustrating

  • Not waterproof (swimming, showering)

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This topic is intended for OEMs who want to build a Windows 10 system with USB Type-C connector and want to leverage OS features that allow for faster charging, power delivery, dual role, alternate modes, and error notifications through Billboard devices.

A traditional USB connection uses a cable with a USB A and USB B connector on each end. The USB A connector always plugs in to the host side and the USB B connector connects the function side, which is a device (phone) or peripheral (mouse, keyboard). By using those connectors, you can only connect a host to a function; never a host to another host or a function to another function. The host is the power source provider and the function consumes power from the host.

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The traditional configuration limits some scenarios. For example, if a mobile device wants to connect to a peripheral, the device must act as the host and deliver power to the connected device.

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The USB Type-C connector, introduced by the USB-IF, defined in the USB 3.1 specification, addresses those limitations. Windows 10 introduces native support for those features.

Feature summary

  • Allows for faster charging up to 100W with Power Delivery over USB Type-C.
  • Single connector for both USB Hosts and USB Devices.
  • Can switch USB roles to support a USB host or device.
  • Can switch power roles between sourcing and sinking power.
  • Supports other protocols like DisplayPort and Thunderbolt over USB Type-C.
  • Introduces USB Billboard device class to provide error notifications for Alternate Modes.
Driver

Official specifications

Hardware design

USB Type-C connector is reversible and symmetric.

The main component are: the USB Type-C connector and its port or PD controller that manages the CC pin logic for the connector. Such systems typically have a dual-role controller that can swap the USB role from host to function. It has Display-Out module that allows video signal to be transmitted over USB. Optionally it can support BC1.2 charger detection.

Consider recommendations for the design and development of USB components, including minimum hardware requirements, Windows Hardware Compatibility Program requirements, and other recommendations that build on those requirements.Hardware component guidelines USB

Choose a driver model

Use this flow chart to determine a solution for your USB Type-C system.

If your system..Recommended solution..
Does not implement PD state machinesWrite a client driver to the UcmTcpciCx class extension.
Write a USB Type-C port controller driver
Implements PD state machines in hardware or firmware and support USB Type-C Connector System Software Interface (UCSI) over ACPILoad the Microsoft provided in-box drivers, UcmUcsiCx.sys and UcmUcsiAcpiClient.sys.
See UCSI driver.
Implements PD state machines in hardware or firmware, but either does not support UCSI, or support UCSI but requires a transport other than ACPIWrite a client driver for the UcmCx class extension.
Write a USB Type-C connector driver
Write a USB Type-C Policy Manager client driver
Implements UCSI but requires a transport other than ACPIWrite a client driver to the UcmUcsiCx class extension.
Use this sample template and modify it based on a transport that your hardware uses.
Write a UCSI client driver

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Bring up drivers

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  • USB Function driver bring-up is only required if you support USB Function mode. If you previously implemented a USB Function driver for a USB micro-B connector, describe the appropriate connectors as USB Type-C in the ACPI tables for the USB Function driver to continue working.

    For more information, see instructions about writing a USB Function driver.

  • USB Role-Switch driver bring-up is only required for devices that have a Dual Role controller that assumes both Host and Function roles. To bring-up the USB Role-Switch driver, you need to modify the ACPI tables to enable the Microsoft in-box USB role-switch driver.

    For more information, see the guidance for bringing up the USB Role Switch Driver.

  • A USB Connector Manager Driver is required for Windows to manage the USB Type-C ports on a system. The bring-up tasks for a USB Connector Manager driver depend on the driver that you choose for the USB Type-C ports: The Microsoft in-box UCSI (UcmUcsiCx.sys and UcmUcsiAcpiClient.sys) driver, a UcmCx client driver, or a UcmTcpciCx client driver. For more information, see the links in the preceding section that describe how to choose the right solution for your USB Type-C system.

Test

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Bang olufsen audio drivers windows 10. Perform various functional and stress tests on systems and devices that expose a USB Type-C connector.

Test USB Type-C systems with USB Type-C ConnEx - Run USB tests included in the Windows Hardware Lab Kit (HLK) for Windows 10.

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Run USB function HLK tests with a C-to-A cable (search for Windows USB Device in the HLK

Certification/ComplianceAttend Power Delivery and USB Type-C compliance workshops hosted by the standards bodies.

See also