Awesome Features

The application has three big components: dashboards where data coming from the ECU can be displayed in various formats, a tuning section and data log file viewers.

  • Fully customizable dashboards

    Customize the dashboards with any indicators you want to see

  • Display GPS / Accelerometer data

    Android sensors on your device are used to display useful GPS geolocation data (including speed) as well as triple axis accelerometer data (including g-force)

  • Head-up display

    Display the app in your windshield to see it at a glance

  • Multiple data log files viewers

    Look at the data you just data logged on your phone or tablet using the build-in time series, maps or scatter plot log viewers

  • Real-time tuning

    Tune on the fly using supported real-time tuning hardware or edit a binary file to program a chip later

  • Responsive support

    We try to answer email from our customers as fast as we can, more often than not, we will answer within 24 hours

How It Works

The application uses ADX and XDF files which are files from TunerPro (Windows software). These files can be found on various sites such as TunerPro Web site itself, GearHead EFI forums as well as your cars enthusiasts forums related to your specific vehicle.

The Bridge Curse The Bridge Curse

Here is the easy steps that you can follow that will get you going

Steps

  • Find the ADX file for your vehicle. This is often the hardest part. Once your've found it, the rest is easy!

  • Install the ALDLdroid application from Google Play

  • Use the Import Data stream feature of the application to import your ADX file.

  • Connect the ALDL cable to your vehicle diagnostic port. Hit the Connect to ECU menu in the application and watch the data come in!

Hardware Supported

The application supports various hardware that can be wired or connected wirelessly to your Android device. Here is what is currently supported:

Data logging

Wired connection (USB) and wireless (Bluetooth) are both supported by the app. For Bluetooth, we suggest the Red Devil River adapters (or the 1320 electronics if you can find one used) and for USB, any FTDI (USB chip) based cable will do. :obd2allinone should have what you need.

Chip programming

It is possible to program chip for your ECU using the Moates BURN1 (discontinued), BURN2 as well as AutoProm.

Real-time tuning

For real-time tuning, the application currently support the Moates hardware as well. That is the Ostrich as well as the AutoProm.

NVRAM ECU

If you ECU is equipped with an NVRAM module for real-time tuning, that is also supported for some ECU. Mainly Australian ECUs at this point and more can be added as required.

The Bridge Curse

Application Screenshots

Some of the features described above can be seen on the screenshots below.

Customer Video

We love to see what our customers do with our application so here a video of Boosted & Built Garage and his pretty awesome setup.

The Bridge Curse 【Real - COLLECTION】

At the heart of the film is the classic trope of the campus ghost story, a staple of Asian horror. The legend dictates that anyone who counts the steps of the university bridge at midnight and finds an extra step will meet a gruesome fate. This premise allows the film to tap into shared cultural anxieties regarding transition, youth, and the unknown. However, director Lester Hsi elevates this simple premise through a non-linear narrative structure. The film cleverly intertwines two different timelines—one featuring the original group of students in 2016 and another following a journalist investigating the tragedy years later. This temporal manipulation creates a labyrinthine viewing experience, keeping the audience disoriented and mimicking the terrifying, inescapable loop in which the characters find themselves trapped.

The Bridge Curse is a prominent 2020 Taiwanese horror film directed by Lester Hsi that masterfully bridges the gap between traditional East Asian folklore and the modern digital era. Rooted in a well-known urban legend from Tunghai University in Taichung, the film follows a group of university students who attempt to livestream a supernatural challenge on a campus bridge rumored to be haunted by the vengeful spirit of a young woman. By examining its narrative structure, its commentary on digital media culture, and its place within the broader context of Taiwanese horror cinema, one can understand how the film revitalizes classic ghost story tropes for a contemporary audience. The Bridge Curse

In conclusion, The Bridge Curse is much more than a standard campus slasher. It is a sophisticated exploration of how ancient folklore survives and adapts in the age of the internet. By blending a complex, fragmented narrative with a sharp critique of social media obsession, the film captures the unique anxieties of the twenty-first century. It stands as a testament to the creativity of contemporary Taiwanese filmmakers who continue to find new, terrifying ways to make old ghosts haunt the modern world. At the heart of the film is the

Furthermore, the film contributes significantly to the ongoing renaissance of Taiwanese horror cinema. Following in the footsteps of successful franchises like The Tag-Along, The Bridge Curse leans heavily into local color and localized urban legends rather than imitating Hollywood jump-scare formulas. It utilizes the aesthetics of "found footage" and screen-life cinematography to create a claustrophobic sense of realism. The spirit itself is not just a monster but a manifestation of unresolved trauma and cyclical violence, a common theme in Eastern horror where ghosts are born from intense human tragedy and injustice. However, director Lester Hsi elevates this simple premise

Beyond its atmospheric scares, The Bridge Curse serves as a poignant critique of the "clout-chasing" culture prevalent among modern youth. The tragedy is set in motion not merely by curiosity, but by the characters' desperate desire for online validation and viral fame. They set up professional cameras, coordinate a live broadcast, and actively mock the supernatural to entertain their digital audience. The film suggests that the true horror lies in the commodification of fear and the loss of boundaries between the private and public spheres. The lens of the smartphone camera acts as a barrier that distances the students from the immediate danger, illustrating how digital media can desensitize individuals to real-world consequences until it is far too late.

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