Hi, I see quite a lot of activity. Last FOSDEM brought me the insight that about 70% of all participants in the GNURadio section hold a callsign.
When I asked the audience who had a callsign, I also initially expected just a couple of hands up, but the result was overwhelming. I guess the issue is something different: a) It's a completely new field of technology, so many people still try to understand apparently quite simple things. - But which are not so simple for somebody without a solid knowledge of computer science PLUS mathematics. I have studied computer science, but I have never been taught about complex numbers. And I still have my problems to explain how a FIR filter *really* works. b) Many active GNURadio developers don't have the intention to build a radio. Instead they want to investigate aspects of radio applications, such as measuring the energy within an entire spectrum (as one of the recent threads) or they want to create a crosscorrelation block and identify the delay between two different signals etc. c) I generally see a tendency of tinkering getting ever stronger as opposed to operating. If you really want to operate, it's much cheaper to just buy a rig from Ebay for 150 Euro and you're well prepared. If you translate manhours into money, it becomes clear where the investment goes. One side-aspect is also that you can perfectly do your experiments in big cities (like for me in Munich), but I don't have any possibility to set up an antenna. But I can start my computer, plug in my USRP2 and start to create code. For my station I must travel 150km... In my talk in Brussels most of the audience agreed with me that GNURadio is fantastic, but it's even more fun if you are allowed to release the HF to the open and really create worldwide (or even extraterrestrial) applications. This is the reason why also in the future there will be many GNURadio developers who will consider to get a license - even though they may not be visible at first. Best73 markus dl8rds, 4l9mh Am Samstag, den 07.11.2015, 18:45 -0500 schrieb Marcus D. Leech: > On 11/07/2015 04:13 PM, Mike Willis wrote: > > GQRX works very well but is there or might there be any plans to > > develop a comprehensive tranceiver based on gnuradio? > > > > SDRs like the hackRF and the Ettus USRPs provide great building blocks > > for a VHF/UHF amateur radio station, with only filtering and > > amplification needed to cover all bands from 4m to 6cm, yet I see > > little work on such things, which is odd. Maybe there is no interest > > but there might be. > > > > Mike > The ham radio fraction of the Gnu Radio population, and the SDR > population in general is fairly small compared all the other communities, so > one should perhaps not be surprised that there hasn't been a whole > lot of development in that direction. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss-gnuradio mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
