PCI Shortwave Receiver 188
payman writes "WiNRADiO Communications has just announced news of its forthcoming WR-G303i PCI based shortwave, digital radio, narrowband FM receiver. This is said to be "the world's first dedicated shortwave receiver on a PC card. It is also the first commercially available receiver where the entire final intermediate frequency stage and an all-mode demodulator are entirely executed in software, running on a personal computer." Winradio has in the past supported Linux for its products (see Linradio), and it most likely will continue to do so with the WR-G303i."
Interference? (Score:1)
And what's on shortwave that isn't streamed like the BBC?
Re:Interference? (Score:1)
Among other things, Amateur Radio Service. It might be fun to pair this card with a tiny PSK-31 transmitter. Digital modes are a lot of fun.
Re:Interference? (Score:1)
Re:Interference? (Score:1)
WiNRADiO? (Score:2)
Re:WiNRADiO? (Score:1)
Re:WiNRADiO? (Score:1)
Alas, no, it is not customary, any more than using "lose" (with one O) to mean the opposite of "find" is customary. Commas in particular are quite often misplaced in this manner. Annoys the crap out of me.
(I suspect instead of "customary" you meant "grammatically correct".)
Re:WiNRADiO? (Score:1)
Probably by association to Winmodems, which are cheaper to manufacture than real modems because most of the signal processing is offloaded to software (as someone once said, "using a $200 CPU to emulate a $7 UART").
From the blurb (no I didn't read the article!), it sounds like they are not only doing the same thing here, but they are actually proud of it and consider this to be a bullet-point feature.
Ohhhhhh... (Score:2)
Now THAT would be a fun card to stick into my HP 200LX.
Re:Ohhhhhh... (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah me too until I read the title of the article, "PCI Shortwave Receiver." Oh wait I read that first.
Re:Ohhhhhh... (Score:2, Informative)
Very Cool (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Very Cool (Score:1)
Re:Very Cool (Score:1)
Very interesting stuff.
Poor man's spectrum analyzer?? (Score:2)
You're an idiot (Score:1)
When was the last time you used your home sterero as a spectrum analyzer?
Re:You're an idiot (Score:1)
Re:You're an idiot (Score:1)
Re:You're an idiot (Score:1)
Okay, now... (Score:1)
I'm not being sarcastic or anything, I'm just curious of to whom this is relevant and why.
Re:Okay, now... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Okay, now... (Score:1)
Re:Okay, now... (Score:1)
Re:Okay, now... (Score:1)
You are not a true Geek without a callsign.
Tom
KD4FTQ
Re:Okay, now... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Okay, now... (Score:2, Informative)
With a DSP directly in the IF section, any damn thing you want it to.
I know it's not the answer you were looking for, but I hope someone else was.
Re:Okay, now... (Score:1)
Notice in the specs the "0.15-1.5 MHz band". 1.5MHz is 1500KHz, or 1500 on an AM radio dial. FM is around 100MHz, and you can see that is well within the specifications.
What is interesting, however, is that this device is under software control. You can use it to scan to build a list of active frequencies, scan frequencies and let you hear any transmissions, monitor and log activity (for uses such as monitor interference from frequencies near those which your company radios use), record favorite shows, or merely spin the dial over a much wider range of stations than just the local broadcast stations. ("This is The Voice Of The Andes...")
Also note the note that some frequencies might be blocked due to laws in some countries. If your country forbids reception then... well, maybe you can only listen to your government's official station, so you'll have to check what frequency it is on. Assuming your country's radios reveal the frequency and have more than an "ON" switch and a dial for selecting between "1" and "2".
Re:Okay, now... (Score:1, Insightful)
AFAIK, none of the commercial FM stations in the US are in that range.
Right you are. (Score:1)
The frequency range is 150 kHz to 1.5 GHz, and you can use all their fancy software to decode all kinds of things.
Of curse, being the Land of the Free, as stated on the site, "the US version excludes cellular frequencies 825-849 and 869- 894 MHz"
So order one from Canda and have it shipped down.
Slightly offtopic, but.... (Score:1)
Anyone else get annoyed by this?
Limitations? (Score:1)
What DRM is included in the hardware and/or software?
Re:Limitations? (Score:1)
Additional demodulator types are planned as further options, including a DRM...demodulator.
Sorry, had to say it.
Re:Limitations? (Score:2)
None I imagine. This is a shortwave reciever, after all.
What DRM is included in the hardware and/or software?
Digital Radio Mondial (DRM) is a software option.
You really should read the article for further details.
Re:Limitations? (Score:1)
Let's see what that may include:
Many countries also have restrictions on specific frequencies, such as those which they use for cellular or wireless phones. Not always the same frequencies which other countries use.
Re:Limitations? (Score:1)
We've gotten accustomed to protecting our pork projects, thanks to Senator Byrd.
Re:Limitations? (Score:1)
Re:ecpa? this is a shortwave reciever.. (Score:1)
Greaaaaat. (Score:2)
{Note the subtle humor before modding}
Re:Greaaaaat. (Score:2)
(note twisted response to subtle humour
GNU Radio? (Score:3, Interesting)
-russ
Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:3, Insightful)
Since shortwave is more or less a party line with pure analog transmission, what stops an unscrupulous person from spamming it and making it unusable to everyone else? Sure, if you did that in the US FCC troops would come bust down your door but what's to stop, say, Sadaam from having a party one day and jaming all short wave channels with a few hundred megawatts of propoganda.
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:2, Interesting)
There is plenty of digital traffic on HF.
what stops an unscrupulous person from spamming it and making it unusable to everyone else?
The ITU [itu.int]. Even though I do remeber Castro took 1510 WLAC here in Nashville, along with other stations on the East Coast, off the air around 1989 because of "TV Marti". (Sorry for no links. I'm lazy.)
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:2, Informative)
Uhhh, not quite.
what stops an unscrupulous person from spamming it and making it unusable to everyone else?
It happens [arrl.org]. Also see this. [google.com]
but what's to stop, say, Sadaam from having a party one day and jaming all short wave channels with a few hundred megawatts of propoganda
It would take a hell of a lot of transmitters and electricity, antennas, etc, and you could easily track the source of the transmission through triangulation.
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:1)
Iraq shortwave broadcasting exists but is "erratic", they say [grove-ent.com].
- AA6E
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:1)
If you've ever listened to any ham bands you'd see that he doesn't need to make it unuseable. It pretty much already is. And if he did try, he'd be drowned out by a few loud idiots. There's a reason I let my license lapse many years ago - the hobby got "embraced" by a large number of CB types and it all went down hill.
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:1)
Don't lump all of us in with the guys down on 75 Meters. If you had tuned around, you would find alot of really nice folks on the air, but if you look for a bunch of jerks, that's all you will find.
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:1)
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:5, Interesting)
Ham radio hobbyists provide an important redundant channel that is extremely difficult to knock off the air. When the hurricanes and earthquakes are done, all a Ham needs is a car battery and a length of wire to make contacts all over the world. Here is an article on use of Ham radio during some problems on Mir:
http://www.hamradio-online.com/1997/jun/mircris
And here is one on activities associated with Isadore that are in progress as I type this:
http://www.arrl.org/
There are currently about 680,000 licensed ham operators in the US.
This a large number to relegate to the past..
I bet those same geeks were the first pepple on the internet and the early online services like compuserve in the late 80s)
Hams were much more likely to run their own BBS than hang out on a service like Compuserve.
what stops an unscrupulous person from spamming it and making it unusable to everyone else
Te short answer is: The Laws of Physics.
It is possible to jam a few frequencies here and there, but to jam shortwave transmissions world-wide takes something with the power of a solar flare. That's a lot more than a few hundred megawatts.
During the cold war the Soviet Union + Warsaw Pact tried (and mostly failed) to jam transmissions like the Voice of America, Deutsche Welle, KOL Israel, Radio Tirana and the BBC to their own populations. Estimates were that they were spending about $1 billion per year, had 200 large scale jamming stations and were putting out about 1 terawatt of EMR.
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:2)
Where did they get all the electricity for that? Especially considering that the total electricity generating _capacity_ was 811 gigawatts [doe.gov] for the US in 2000 (note all generators/plants are probably never at peak capacity at the same time)?
I'd say that terawatt number is as reliable as a unmaintained 10 year old car...
Re:Anyone here a ham radio buff? (Score:1)
There are a few of us left. And yes, I was early on the internet. Like about 1975, when it wasn't much more than a few networked university and DoD computers. And I was early on Compuserve as well. I fit your profile to an uncanny degree.
what stops an unscrupulous person from spamming it and making it unusable to everyone else?
One thing is vigilante justice. When someone makes himself an obnoxious ass on a ham band it isn't difficult to find him (transmitter hunting is something some hams do for amusement). Retaliation can range from putting a pin through his coax to more drastic measures.
Check Out These Cool Frequencies! (Score:1, Interesting)
* 1300 UTC Radio Australia 5995, 6020, 9580, 11650
* 1400 UTC Radio Australia as above
* 1500 UTC Radio Japan 9505 kHz
* 1600 UTC Voice of Russia 9470, 11675, 11775, 15490
* 1700 UTC Voice of Russia as above and 9560 kHz.
* 1800 UTC Voice of Russia as above and 7305, 7340, 9765, 9775, 9890 kHz.
* 1900 UTC Voice of Russia as above and 12070 kHz.
* 2000 UTC UAE Radio Dubai 13675 (Arabic)
* 2100 UTC Voice of Iran 15084 kHz (Farsi)
* Radio Kuwait 9855 (Arabic)
* 2200 UTC Radio Sofia, Bulgaria 7535, 7545 kHz
* Radio Cairo, Egypt 9900 kHz.
* Voice of Turkey 9445, 9460 (Turkish)
* Voice of Greece 9395, 11595 (Greek)
* 2300 UTC Radio Austria Int. 5945, 6155, 9870 (German & English)
* Radio Prague, Czech Rep 7345, 9435
* RAI Italy 6010, 9675, 11800 (Italian)
* R. France Intern'l 9715, 9790 (French)
* Voice of Germany 6100, 9545, 9730 (German)
* Radio Exterior, Spain 9540, 9630 (Spanish)
* Vatican Radio 5880 (Italian)
* 0000 UTC BBC World Service 5975, 6175, 9590
* 0100 UTC Brazilian stations between 4750 & 5100 kHz
* 0200 UTC Brazilian stations between 4750 & 5100 kHz
* 0300 UTC CKZU St. John's, Newfoundland on 6160 kHz
* 0400 UTC CHNX Halifax, NS on 6130 kHz
* Radio Villa, Dominican Rep 4960 (Spanish)
* Ecos del Torbes, Venezuela 4980 (Spanish)
* 0500 UTC R. Havana Cuba 9820, 9830 kHz.
* Voice of the Andes, Ecuador 9745, 12015
* WWCR Nashville, TN 5070 kHz
* WBCQ Monticello, ME 7415 kHz
* Voice of America 7170, 7295, 9700
* 0600 UTC Radio For Peace, Costa Rica 6975, 15050
* R. Mexico Int'l 9705 (Spanish)
You can also check out military, air traffic, even natural phenomenon like solar flares, lightning storms, and things.
Here's another list. [polkcounty.org]
Re:Check Out These Cool Frequencies! (Score:1)
Ohh what's the frequency of lightning? I know there is a common one but I never did find out where it is.
Dumb Question (Score:2)
Could someone give me an overview of what exactly this is useful for?
I'm not trying to troll, I'm just a little confused about what this thing does and what it is useful for.
Re:Dumb Question (Score:4, Informative)
It will do a bit of both. It covers spectrum up to 30Mhz, in that range there is plain old AM radio, HAM radio, commercial marine, military. There's all sorts of transmission modes in there too; plain voice on AM, voice on SSB, morse code on SSB, FM, data of several types.
One of the things you can do for example is receive weather fax's, you can 'snoop' other forms of data communications as well with add-on accessories. Not sure how the radios on a card work with add-ons or if the software can do it outright inline.
What I found odd was the mention that this was a first of some sort, there have been PC based radios similar to this for a long while, and third party linux frontend support as well. Check out freshmeat, there are other radio frontend controller projects too.
Personally I like having a seperate radio device, it's better for the toy factor and at least a little bit safer as far as picking up static discharges on the antennas, which just creeps me out with antennas that go direct to a PCI card.
Re:Dumb Question (Score:1)
The IF in my very ragged terms is what is used to 'mix' with the signal input to create the output. There are 'dead spots' in any radio due to a sort of overlap situation with the fixed or narrowly variable IF and the actual spectrum space. The advantage of completely variable IF is one for the real radio fanatics but it's still a neat innovation. Now whether a radio on a card is 'quiet' enough that it would even matter....this is making me curious enough to hunt one down to check it out.
Oh yeah, used HAM 'HF' rigs are available cheap on ebay and make fun toys and halfway decent shortwave rigs. There are several computer control frontend projects kicking around, compare the models supported and go shopping. SWL (short wave listening) can be a nice diversion.
Re:Dumb Question (Score:2)
You described the local oscillator and its output, not the IF. Most radios use a variable-frequency local oscillator for tuning...its output and the antenna input (possibly RF-amplified) are fed into a mixer. The mixer produces sum and difference signals on all input frequencies; the frequency you want to pick off is the intermediate frequency (IF). A fixed-frequency tuned circuit picks off this signal for demodulation, amplification, etc. As an example, let's say you want to tune in 840 kHz on the broadcast AM band. The IF used in an AM radio is (typically) 455 kHz. If the local oscillator produces 385 kHz, the 840-kHz input will be downmixed to 455 kHz (840-385=455). Tuning the broadcast band requires a local oscillator that produces anything from 55 to 1245 kHz. (Note that if the local oscillator could produce 1295 kHz, you could pick up 840 kHz at what would appear as "1750 kHz" on the dial (1295-840=455). Better shortwave receivers employ two or three mixers at different IFs to make sure each station only appears once. FM receivers use two mixers as well (1st IF is 10.7 MHz, 2nd IF is the same 455 kHz used for AM).)
IFs are typically fixed-frequency tuned circuits, since it's easier to make a good fixed-frequency tuned circuit than a good variable-frequency tuned circuit (TRF receivers and crystal receivers are examples of radios built around variable-frequency tuned circuits). Since the "circuit" involved in the WinRadio is really just some software, they aren't as bound by the limitations of real coils/capacitors/etc. and can use whatever IF they want.
Re:Dumb Question (Score:2)
Shortwave is great for long-distance transmissions. Think in terms of thousands of kilometers. End result: you get to listen to radio stations from other continents. Not terribly impressive in the days of internet radio, I'll admit, but it's still pretty cool. It doesn't require anything but a decent receiver (good ones can be had for less than a hundred bucks US, don't listen to obsessed hobbyists who tell you different) and some batteries.
I'm especially fond of Deutsche Wella [dwelle.de] (Germany's international broadcaster) and Radio Netherlands [www.rnw.nl].
I don't know anything about ham radio, so I don't know if this card would be any good for that. This looks like a fun card to play with. I've been using the mic jack on my PC's sound card to record shows, but it's an older model and I have to turn it on and tune it manually. With one of these cards I could just set a cron job and not have to be on hand.
Re:Dumb Question (Score:2)
Ah, nostalgia, aka "I feel old"
Distributed Computing Telescope (Score:1)
Re:Distributed Computing Telescope (Score:1)
Also remember, with SETI the whole project centers around the fact that their existing antennae pick up so much data it requires a global effort to process the information. They aren't lacking for the ability to listen, merely to interpret the overwhelming amount of data they already collect.
Re:Distributed Computing Telescope (Score:2)
I have a dish [gornall.net], which had to get signoff from the secretary of state before I could install it
Making an interferometer poses major problems with time resolution though - to merge all these amateur radio telescopes together would (a) take a huge chunk of bandwidth for each telescope (ADSL ain't enough...), (b) need excellent synchronisation between the telescopes, which almost all of us don't have, and (c) need the dishes to be steerable, which most of them aren't...
There is however a project argus [setileague.org] doing the same thing with lots of individual telescopes. As soon as I'm happy with the s/w running on mine, I'll be a member of the group
And no, no aliens yet
Oh Boy, TOYS! (Score:1)
Atencion: Seis Siete Tres Siete Cero (Score:5, Interesting)
An excerpt from NPR's Lost & Found Sound [npr.org]:
"Eventually, if listeners dig around [the shortwave spectrum] long enough, they'll tune across voices reciting endless strings of numbers. These broadcasts have been heard for at least 40 years. The signals are powerful, but they contain no information about location of the transmitter or the intended audience. Most listeners linger for a short time, then tune away, utterly baffled."
When I discovered these myself, I found them bizarre, chilling- and intriguing. In order to get some background, I ordered a 4-CD set from Irdial recordings in the UK called The Conet Project [ibmpcug.co.uk]... highly reccomended.
What is perhaps the most surprising is that the number of numbers stations boradcasting on the shortwave band are only increasing- variously attributed to the increasing sophistication of organized crime, drug cartels, terrorist/separatist organizations and an increasingly fractious global intelligence community.
Do follow the links above if this intrigues you in the slightest- and just try going back to your insular world-view afterwards; "the enemy" is out there, and he's hiding right out in the open.
/. Article (Score:2, Interesting)
Crack a "Numbers" Station [slashdot.org] ... until now!
The makers of "The Conet Project" [ibmpcug.co.uk] (a four-CD set of numbers-station recordings) have thrown down the proverbial gauntlet and announced a
series of "cryptographic
challenges" [ibmpcug.co.uk] -- the object of which is to crack an actual numbers station
broadcast. Dust off your Crypto caps, everyone -- I want to see a slashdotter win this one! "
Posted by Hemos [hemos.net] on Sat 27 May 01:35PM
from the cool-insight dept.
boss soul [circling.org] writes: "On Friday, NPR did an excellent story [npr.org] on those infamous 'Numbers Stations' that broadcast on shortwave radio. Since the 1950s, these stations have been broadcasting nothing but an unidentified human voice reading a string of numbers. Though most people believe that these broadcasts are used by intelligence agencies to communicate with their agents abroad, there has never been any way to confirm this
Re:/. Article (Score:1)
Re:/. Article (Score:2)
Now that'd be an interesting project.
Re:Atencion: Seis Siete Tres Siete Cero (Score:2)
When I moved to California in 1984, I was appalled to discover that shortwave signals here are too weak to listen to -- couldn't get ANYthing. In Montana, I got tons of shortwave stations, plus sometimes could hear Radio Nederland's *AM* broadcasts from the Antilles!!
Re:Atencion: Seis Siete Tres Siete Cero (Score:2)
You need, in this order:
1. Antenna, Antenna, Antenna! Go to RadioShack and get their 75 foot length of copper SW antenna wire & figure out a good place to string it. Follow the directions.
2. The step above should solve 99.9999999 percent of your problems, but failing that, get a better radio. $99 should get you quite a decent rig at Fry's Electronics.
Re:Atencion: Seis Siete Tres Siete Cero (Score:2)
Haven't tried since I moved up here to the high desert. That radio croaked a while back and my older s/w, tho a honkin' big serious outfit my dad paid big bucks for, never had the reception the cheap-assed portable did. (And admittedly by now I'm out of the listening habit, but it's still fun to remember.)
Much of interior CA and SoCal is effectively radio-dead even for clear channel (the real meaning, not the chain) AM stations, and often you're lucky even to get local stations -- frex I can't get a trace of the Albuquerque truckers' station that is blast-your-ears-strong all thru the entire mountain and midwest regions, even to southern Canada. Dunno how relevant that is to s/w.
BTW I wouldn't touch anything from Fry's that wasn't namebrand and independently warrantied. Fry's pulls too much scummy crap. Go read the writeup from Forbes magazine a few years ago (it comes up on their site if you search for Fry's). If anything it understates the problem.
Other AM/FM PCI Cards/USB devices? (Score:1)
Anyone know of a AM/FM addon that's not ISA? (Oh, and not having to use my soundcard's linein would be nice.)
Or would this new card be it? If it's as low cost as they say maybe having shortwave and God knows what else wouldn't be such a bad thing...
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Other AM/FM PCI Cards/USB devices? (Score:1)
Re:Other AM/FM PCI Cards/USB devices? (Score:1)
You might want to check out the ICOM PCR-1000. It hooks up via RS-232 serial and can be completely controlled via Linux. qtpcr is a nice Linux/Unix software package that will control the reciever. If you can find an older one on ebay, there are several chip/hardware mods available.
one ham's opinion (Score:5, Insightful)
I visited the site (at least it's not slashdoted), but I have no interest in this hack. Here are my complaints:
I wasted time looking at their site, but s far as I could tell they don't want to tell me the price on the thing. If the price is listed anywhere it is certainly not easy to find, even a targeted price range. Do they think I'm so hard up to have this that I'll tell them I want it even if they will not tell the price?
While they don't seem to want to tell the price, they did mention that there will be a standard software demodulator and an optional "Professional demodulator". And more demodulators later. They don't say what the professional demodulator will cost, but as it is optional it certainly will cost. So why would I want to buy their stuff and have crippled non-professional software? And on top of that they know the professional modulator can be replaced with something else in the future that will obviously cost me more money!
OK, I know it costs money to develop software, but in this case when the software is tightly tied to their hardware, I want a company that sells me the hardware and then supports me, not one that tries to bleed me dry, even delivering less than professional software with the basic package and then asking if I want the good software! Of course I want the good software. What I want even more is good open source software, or even hardware interface specs so that I can roll my own. But that is hardly likely to be forthcoming from a company that looks at their hardware customers as cash cows for their software.
There are other issues as well, the inside of a PC is hardly the best environment for a RF receiver. But I might be willing to experiment with this hardware if it was sold with decent software without a bait and switch approach, and the company was more open about things like the prices and the hardware interface.
Re:one ham's opinion (Score:1, Insightful)
I call it engineer syndrome. For some reason engineers feel compelled to patent and hide everything they do. It's a superiority complex, but not some some programmers have, it's every single damn one of them bastards. There are tons of HAM's (ie. engineers) that have stifled the hobby by wasting time hiding all their secrets to then only have the project/products die soon after.
Re:one ham's opinion (Score:1)
I call it engineer syndrome. For some reason engineers feel compelled to patent and hide everything they do.
Every radio I have gotten has always come with full schematics and block diagrams. I'm not sure what you are talking about.
Re:one ham's opinion (Score:2)
I'm sure they provide an SDK so you can write your own demod if you don't like the one you are willing ot pay for.
Also, call any shop that deals Winradio, they will be more than happy to tell you their prices, I'm sure.
Perhaps the price isn't on yet because they aren't ready to sell them yet.
Re:one ham's opinion (Score:2)
You can be sure of it if you want, but since I saw absolutely no mention of it on their webpages I'm just as sure it's not available. And I see no reason to try to track down the price on this thing. Maybe it isn't ready yet, so what? They could at least give a suggested retail price or a "less than $xxx" price. If they can't do that then the rest of the advertisement (and that's clearly what it is) is a waste of my time. The real insult is that they want me to give my e-mail address and sign up to be perpetually spammed by them, but can't give me the basic information to see if this thing is an incredible bargain or an overpriced hack.
Re:one ham's opinion (Score:2)
> it's there somewhere but I didn't see it.
>
>
Thank you for your enquiry. The price will be approx US$500.
Thank you for your interest in our products and we look forward
to be of service to you again soon.
Best regards,
Martin Kent
64-bit (Score:1)
SWL Blah Blah Blah (Score:4, Informative)
for 300$ US i can get an Icom PCR-1000. it does 60Hz-1295Mhz (stupid cell blocked, bah!), has windows, linux and even macos support, only needs a serial interface (works just fine on a USB->serial adapter, even), and i can place it as far as i want from my RF noisy computer shack.
and it uses 13.8vdc. get the picture?
did i mention it was 300$?
Re:SWL Blah Blah Blah (Score:1)
Re:SWL Blah Blah Blah (Score:2)
According to the Icom specs, the lower frequency is 100 khz. And in a couple of minutes I was able to find instructions for unblocking it (even the ones with serial #s above 4000).
Why? (Score:1)
Not to put anybody down, but if this is a card that must be installed in a computer, why then isn't the software executed on a small microprocessor on the card, relieving the main processor from having to mess with it? After all, this is how graphics boards are made faster, and come to think of it, even keyboards work this way, so why shouldn't every peripheral do its internal work in the peripheral?
weatherfax software? (Score:1)
A laptop solution would be a quite useful for remote sites.
A simple search on freshmeat & sourceforge doesn't turn up anything.
What's weather fax? [francisperey.com]
Software Controlled Radios (Score:1)
1. Internal. This is the Winradio approach. The good news is that, as processors become faster and faster, they're able to absorb more of the electronics into software layers. The latest WinRadio is akin to all those Winmodems we've seen. However, the environment within a computer case isn't exactly the best place to put an RF circuit -- it's full of all kinds of strong fields and oddball harmonics.
2. External. A much nicer place to put your radio is in a nice RF tight box a few feet away from all that nonlinear harmonic crapola. And, after all, the output is relatively low bandwidth, so bring it into the system through an I/O port -- USB, 1394, heck even a serial port will do.
What you really want is an Icom PCR-1000 [icomamerica.com], covers 100 kHz to 1.3 GHz (continuous if you shop in Akihabara), multimode. Hook it up to a serial port and an audio in jack, and you're all set to vacuum the ether.
Or, just check out the JavaRadio [javaradio.com] network of PCR-1000 equipped sites around the world...
USB or FW interface? (Score:2)
Something in that direction is the ICOM PCR-100 receiver (serial port for control, audio output for--audio). Unfortunately, open source software seems less common in the amateur radio and shortwave communities--people seem to come from a DOS world, which limits what you can do with many of the computer controllable receivers and radios. Still, there is some software, e.g., http://qsy.to/pcr/control.html.
Ham Radio and Free Software (Score:1)
As time wore on, programs written for the x80-CP/M environment were ported to the x86-DOS world because that's what was available, and most radio applications required what the PC gave you -- the whole machine. But, in all this time, there was never a heritage of code-sharing, since making a little money on the side allowed you to defray the costs of the hobby. That's one well-known characteristic of hams -- they're cheapskates by nature or pick it up as they go on -- and as a result many ham radio innovations are economic, not technical.
As more modern multitasking operating systems showed up, non-realtime apps have been ported to them, and some amazing semi-realtime DSP work has been done, such as the various PSK31 implementations. And many of these are at least of an Open philosophy -- almost all of the PSK31 implementations, for example, are based on a single core DLL produced under a "share and enjoy" license.
So indeed, amateur radio comes from the DOS world, and the Free Nuxis have a lot of catching up to do.
Re:Ham Radio and Free Software (Score:1)
Never discount the value of dusty decks and Code Inertia.
Frankly, nobody in their right fleeping mind does honest realtime work on Linux; if anything, the various tiny BSD kernels would be the tool of choice. Most realtime code these days is written either for nuxi-like environments like VxWorks, or hand bummed for custom threaded operating systems.
I wouldn't exactly proclaim ham radio as a bearer of tech progress either. As I stated above, the innovations have been more economic than technical at times. But give credit where credit is due. Where you around for the Sheet Metal Days of microcomputing? How do you think the hardware community communicated and swapped fixes back then? Yes, you could wait for the bi-monthly flimsy newsletter that some poor hack put out on an irregular basis. Or you could instead interact with the weekly net on 20 meters, ask if anyone had seen a problem or had a fix, and have them describe it to you directly. The choice is pretty obvious.
That's one honking "PC card" (Score:2)
Don't force it, get a bigger hammer. Or an editor. (It's that way on their site too...)
Applications beyond voice? (Score:1)
One of the things i could imagine is the DCF77 signal here in Europe (radio broadcast of atomic precision time at 77 kHz). Others might be GPS (although this probably is to complicated to do entirely in software).
A Better Product (Score:1)
The RX-320 is encased in a steel box and seems to be fairly impervious to RF interference, at least in my environment. It also doesn't take up a slot inside the pc which could be used for other things.
Re:A Better Product (corrected URL)` (Score:1)
Snooping the Airwaves (Score:1)
It is my understanding the the FCC prohibits the sale of devices (in the US) that pick up the frequencies needed to do this anymore.
Will this device tune into these prohibited frequencies? I admit I don't know the first thing about what things transmit on various frequencies. At the time we had a big frequency catalog that told us what channels to tune into to listen to cell phones, Air Force One, cordless phones, and many other interesting things.
Re:Snooping the Airwaves (Score:1)
http://www.howstuffworks.com/cordless-telephone
Triangulation network (Score:1)
Having a nation wide network of PCs with these cards would allow you to triangulate pretty much any transmission. Just put your desired frequency into the network and coalate the data from your peers.
Cool stuff
bottom line (Score:1)
Re:Pro. vs WinRadio. (Score:1)
A good example is an OBD-II scan tool used for diagnosing newer automobiles. If you were to buy a fully integrated stand-alone unit from some tool manufacturer you'd be looking at $600 on up to several thousands. But simply using a computer such as a palm OS based handheld and making an adapter and some software that can chew through the data stream from the OBD-II computer you can mkae yourself a scan tool. Having researched this I purchased one and was pleased to find out that I had essentially bought a $2500 scan tool for $250. Not factoring in the cost of my computer since everyone has 1 to 10 of those things anyways.
So, if a handheld computer can interface with my car and run diagnostics and read critical sensor data in real time for 10 times less what would be so hard about turning one into a radio for cheap? To simply put it, a radio is a capacior and an inductor. The value of one is varied to "tune in" to a certain frequency. Sure there's some A/D converter on this new pc card but that's not expensive. Would it seem so hard for a computer to take this digital data and do soemthing with it? No, it does that with a million of other things all the time(mouse, keyboard, digital camera, etc).
The point is that computers are powerful. More powerful than we realize I think. Combined with innovative ideas and software, they're making functions previously unimagined for a computer to do cheaper.
Re:WinRadio Sucks (Score:1)
Really.. (Score:2)
They will follow trunking, decode pager data, listen to digital transmission, decode satellite imagery, etcetera....
Does a Sony radio do that? Or even a grundig?