Hey anyone...Ok - here's what I've heard for project ideas (and some commentary 
or questions):1) AM modulator to interface Sirius satellite radio with a 
Atwater Kent console radio  I get the idea that you want something like this: 
(except this transmits FM instead of AM).    The input is either a USB-stick or 
an audio jack (from satellite radio) and the output is a transmitted radio 
signal.    http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=4956678  
Interesting project, and it probably wouldn't be too hard.  Let me know if this 
is what you're thinking about.2) Akustica digital microphone decoder  I believe 
this is a surface-mount microphone chip that outputs a PDM digital signal.  Do 
you simply   want a board with a PDM decoder and some memory, so you can read 
the audio signal into a CPU?     I think this interface would probably be 
included on their evaluation board...  What kind of application are you 
thinking of?3) Programmable ethernet clock radio  Interesting...  Sounds like 
everybody's got an idea for this one.  This really sounds like a simplified 
linux box with TinyOS.  Sounds like Gumstix Linux, or a simplified and cheaper 
version of it...  This could turn into a really cool project if the goal   is 
to see how cheap a linux-alarm clock could be designed...  I'd need LOTS of 
help putting the OS into the hardware.4) Software radio receiver   Very 
interesting.  I also used to follow the gnuradio lists and started looking at 
their software, but fell by the   wayside when they were asking for mucho-$$$ 
for hardware...  What kind of application would you want this for?  That would 
determine frequencies, modulation, and sensitivity/linearity 
specifications...5) Cheap lab test equipment...  I'm very interested in this.  
Actually my last project was to replicate the Wispy ISM-band spectrum analyzer 
made  by Metageek and now selling for $200.  I estimate the hardware should 
cost around $20 and the software is free.  I was  hoping to eventually build on 
this design and expand the frequency range and performance - but I haven't 
gotten there yet  and I don't really know if anyone would be interested in it.  
A question I have for you is... Who wants this stuff and what would you use it 
for...  There is already audio-frequency  digitizers/samplers from various 
software radio projects.  I think there are also cheap multimeters for HAM 
radio hobbyists.  Are you looking for something like this, with a USB-port 
interface?  Or something different?    A USB-oscilliscope would be very 
interesting, but it would take some serious software support that I couldn't 
provide.Good ideas so far!Jason

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