Hi Ged, Thanks for your replies :)
On Tue, 2003-06-17 at 13:26, Ged Haywood wrote: > Hi Chris, > > On 17 Jun 2003, Chris AtLee wrote: > > > looking for is a chip or chips that I can throw onto a board, throw > > on an antenna and USB connections and have work. > > Then I'm well enough not up to date with it to help you. Maybe someone > else here will be, but you might be faced with doing serious research. > That's easier than it used to be. :) > > You have any experience with microwave stuff? You can't just "throw > it onto a board", your traces have to be transmission lines, the > impedances have to match, all the nanoseconds add up, etc. etc... I don't personally, but we've got a good engineering team with experience developing various RF modem modules. So I'm not concerned with how the hardware should be layed out, just that once it's layed out properly I can get the software working :) Thanks again! Chris -- Chris AtLee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: INetU Attention Web Developers & Consultants: Become An INetU Hosting Partner. Refer Dedicated Servers. We Manage Them. You Get 10% Monthly Commission! INetU Dedicated Managed Hosting http://www.inetu.net/partner/index.php _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, use the last form field at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-usb-users
