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Hi Len,
You have a lot of interesting history in there! wrote in message ups.com... But, as some 1950s-technology hams may grouse, "that's not RADIO!" Yeah, I'm surprised just how 'neatly' some people seem to be able to decide what is and isn't 'radio.' Hey, the huge electronic supermarket called Fry's is just a mile and a half from my house here. Lots of low-cost, very- high-tech "toys" available in there. I think it's ironic how the cool fashion accessory today is something like a Motorola Razr phone with its associated millions of transistors buried in numerous ICs running software that even relatively few BSEE's would fully understand without a fair amount of additional study (turbo codes, direct sequence spread spectrum systems, psychoacoustic codecs, etc. not usually being a large part of the undergraduate curriculum...), yet 30 years ago anyway hauling around a brick-sized ham radio or CB was quite the nerdy thing to do... Incredible how times change... If they want to TEACH students what goes on in industry of the day, absolutely. They've gone insular amongst themselves in the last few decades...in the teaching part of their activity. IMO one of the biggest problems universities face is that everyone is "expected" to get a 4 year degree these days, and yet the reality of the marketplace is that relatively few jobs truly require anything approach that level of "hard core" education. Hence, engineering courses get watered down, and a lot of BSEE of BSCS students end up performing straightforward programming or digital design using techniques that a 2 year technical college could have easily provided them with. Industry has often contributed to this problem, requiring even technical sales people to now have those 4 year degrees... sheesh! Maybe automotive electronics is next (some applications using RF for "wireless" things like tire pressure measurement while rolling)? I think we're just about there -- I've seen chipsets that'll provide, e.g., some tens of bytes of data once every second or so and consume mere tens of microwatts (on average) to operate; that seems like the kind of thing some clever person can generate just from the rotation of the tire itself using some horribly crude & dirt cheap implementation of a "generator." Well, in my view, there's too much ham emphasis on transmitters and power and mechanical aspect of things. What would you like to see more of? Another case in point: Neil Hecht's neat little frequency displays out of AADE in Seattle. I haven't used one, but I'm aware of their existance. I bought one of Neil's L/C meters years ago now and put it together myself -- I don't recall if an assembled version was even available as an option then. I came across his web site again recently while tracking down a copy of his filter designer (which includes some very useful hints and tips on various transforms), and was pleased to find that he now gives it away for free, stating that he was selling so much more hardware than software anyway, it wasn't worth his effort to keep charging for the software! Oddly, most hobbyist programmers don't like to show flow diagrams...those aren't as "cool" as source code statements neatly arranged by the source code development program. :-( I always figured they just didn't want to go to the extra effort. :-) I agreee that source code alone usually isn't as good as a clear flow diagram. I don't quite agree with the gist of your argument. SDR is the new buzzword and it can certainly apply to digital-based communications (cell phones, etc.) but not necessarily to the analog HF world. I did mean "true" SDRs, such as GNU Radio, Flex Radio, etc. I think it has plenty of application to the HF world (indeed, the development of digital modes for HF seems much more active than on VHF/UHF, which has always struck me as kinda bizarre given how much less bandwidth is available there in the first place... but of course the fact that you can get a signal to the other side of the planet on 100W in good condition is always a big motivator...) IF - and only IF - amateur radio voice communications goes digital on HF will there be any real need for SDR in ham radio "bands" (the ones on HF). I agree with you on this (in that, with analog HF modes, you don't really gain that much by using SDR), but I hasten to point out that there's no "real need" for the analog modes either :-). Whether or not that means Yaesu/Icom/Kenwood/etc. actually make a full-blown HF SDR that supports both the traditional analog modes and some set of newer digital ones, I don't know. One problem with digital voice is that there isn't even a hint of a standard protocol or of many experimenters yielding any results on same. Have I mentioned how some of the best low-bit rate CODECs are proprietary and/or patented and not licensable by a single lowly hobbyist? ;-) Back to watching HDTV from the Winter Olympics in Turin... We have an HDTV tuner but only an "EDTV" TV (an older plasma set), and it still looks fantastic; I've been most impressed. ---Joel |
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