The "you'd have to get all the dependencies right" is no different
than any other advanced application out there. 

Things like "gimp" and
"blender" and a whole whack of others these days have a huge dependency
tree. Gnu Radio is no different. 

I have software that I sell that uses
a little bit of Gnu Radio underneath the GUI. Not a huge deal, but it
does require that you do a Gnu Radio install. 

On Tue, 14 Feb 2012
14:53:36 -0500, Paul Miller wrote: 

> On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at
09:59:45AM +0100, Martin Braun wrote:
>> One way to remedy this might be
GSoC. Developing a nice application,
> I'm a little surprised by this
discussion. I think GNU Radio is positively amazing for prototyping,
testing, and academic purposes. I can't imagine making finished
applications with it though. Is that really what it's supposed to be
for? 
> Seems like distribution alone would be a problem. You'd have to
get your python and boost libraries exactly right just to have a chance.
Perhaps I'm crazy. -Paul

  
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