There will be no UW Python class tonight, Tues Nov 23.
It was canceled due to weather. See:
http://www.pce.uw.edu/basic.aspx?id=6147
http://emergency.washington.edu/
Jon Jacky
I will be teaching a Python course through UW Extension this Fall. It
is the first course in a three-course sequence (a certificate program)
that extends through the academic year. Brian Dorsey and John Hatch
will teach the Winter and Spring courses. Here are the preliminary syllabi
for the
SeaPIG June 2010 Meeting, Thursday, June 10, 7 pm at Office Nomads
Signal Processing with GNU Radio
Jon Jacky
GNU Radio is an open source hardware/software technology stack for signal
processing.
You can program the software in Python and program the hardware (an FPGA) in
Verilog.
I'll
I was planning to talk about the GNU Radio signal processing system.
Jon Jacky
On Wed, 2 Jun 2010, Mike Orr wrote:
I have the next meeting down as June 10th at Office Nomads. Anybody
want to speak or propose a topic? The NumPy talk is still postponed,
probably for another few months.
--
I'll be at the June meeting - that's Thursday June 10, right? I can present at
the meeting.
Is there anyone who has used another Python-based signal processing system,
besides GNU Radio, who would like to present also?
Jon
On Sat, 15 May 2010, Mike Orr wrote:
So Jon, will you be at the
(I'm just re-sending this message with a new subject line)
I'll be at the June meeting - that's Thursday June 10, right? I can present
about the GNU Radio signal processing software and hardware at the meeting.
Is there anyone who has used another Python-based signal processing system,
I proposed talking about GNU Radio, a signal processing system that uses
Python (among other things). An interesting aspect of GNU Radio is that the
system does indeed include optional radio transmitter/receiver hardware, that
*hardware* is open source (you can buy it, but the design --