Hi guys i would like to ask . I bought a freestyle libre from Australia. When i went to UK ran out of sensor so decided to buy a sensor in UK buy there was an error sensor is not compatible with the reader . The question is. If AU reader only reads AU sensor? Can you help me woth this problem thank you
LibreLink is the official one. You might have more luck with an unofficial one - Glimp (plus Glimp S to start the sensor) or Liapp.There is a free Android App..
I'm one of those inverted Diabetics. Australian Diabetes are totally different to others in the world as our blood is Green. Surprisingly the cost of Sensors is the same in the UK and Australia, when you apply the currency conversion.Interesting. It could be a form of DRM like happens with region coding for DVDs. That could be due to Abbott licensing rights to manufacturers/distributors in different regions. Calibration doesn't sound right, ie Australians are much the same as Brits, other than being inverted. It could be a commercial thing as well, so using DRM to prevent people buying the cheapest sensors we can find online. AFAIK, all EU versions should be 'compatible' due to single market rules.
Interesting. It could be a form of DRM like happens with region coding for DVDs. That could be due to Abbott licensing rights to manufacturers/distributors in different regions. Calibration doesn't sound right, ie Australians are much the same as Brits, other than being inverted. It could be a commercial thing as well, so using DRM to prevent people buying the cheapest sensors we can find online. AFAIK, all EU versions should be 'compatible' due to single market rules.
The inverted comment well we think the rules are reversed..... [emoji1
With calibration.... with this batch..
Blood test 4.1
Glimp 3.9
Reader 2.9 (what ever the sensor puts out) greater than 20% out.
Any way the topic for here is geo locking i cant see the point of it....
Time lines are cool hu.But.. but.. You get to party on New Years Eve 12hrs ahead of us. And cricket..
So.. which reading is correct? And if Glimp's a 3rd party app, sounds like that needs work if it's reading a lot differently to the official app. But that's also where IP law can become a problem, ie it can be illegal to reverse engineer or bypass copy protection measures, or just be a patent or copyright infringement.
Usually it's money. So with films etc, rights to territories get flogged off to different distributors who can set their own price, and same can happen with other products sold through different channels & territories. And can sometimes be a tax thing. So there'd be a lot of R&D cost in creating something and those costs can be spread around subsidiaries in high tax countries so they're unprofitable. IP's then held somewhere with low tax, and licence payments flow there. All legal, just unhelpful to consumers who assume the same product can be bought & will work anywhere.
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