I haven't messed with that stuff since the echolink days (87 or so). I had a UHF repeater that I linked. It didn't get much use though. Mostly people asking "can you hear me now" ha.
Right now I have my old land-line phone linked to Google Phone on the Internet. No radios though. ha. I'm actually going to play with the Arduino IDE with the Teensy, as it has segmenting code mnemonics I think. Also picked up an Audio Shield for it, that does 44.1 kHz and has a bunch of neat code to manipulate the audio. Even a GUI tool. Not sure what my end-use will be, but I'd like to get codec2 700C codec running on it. I'm playing with a streaming/thread split buffer design, rather than block mode. Just use the standard codec on the HamVOIP Pi, whatever it is. Hopefully it uses some compression. On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 2:10 PM Al Beard <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi Steve and all, > > Looking at the Teensy 4.0 memory map > https://www.pjrc.com/store/teensy40.html > > I take it, the new compiler (or linker) can allocate code segments > into the right memory areas. > > I have a Teensy 3.6 for MMDVM development, loaded but unused. > > My Men's Shed (Orchard Hills, NSW) has an excellent signal to/from > the Mt Bindo repeater so I looked at us providing an internet link, > AllStar then HamVOIP. > > The HamVOIP team have decided on the Raspberry Pi 4B and Arch linux > as their deployment HW & SW environment. So I'll get one or two for > our Men's Shed. > > Any thoughts? Codecs, which one is the "standard" for the internet links? > > Alan VK2ZIW _______________________________________________ Freetel-codec2 mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freetel-codec2
