[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-29 Thread don
Hi Greg,
 Sorry to say this, but your analogy to just another component 
is plain wrong. The vocoder cannot be replaced by another generic 
component as far as I can ascertain. I cant' even find the algorithms 
that would allow me to program a DSPIC or fpga at home in my meager lab 
to perform any of the functions in the codec.
If they are available (I have searched the US patent office records and 
came up with nothing of substance) please point me to the information 
that I could use to produce my own version for one off, private use, 
that a competent artisan could make from the patent office application.
Taken from your own patent office's requirements for a patent to be granted.
I'm certainly not against using modern technology in ham radio, but if 
it is to be used, all aspects of the technology should be on public 
display, so  any one could:
1: Understand how the technology worked
2: Attempt to build something or code something that would enable them 
to communicate using the technique.
3: Advance the art by understanding and may be even using the latest 
techniques.
I have no problems with the use of digital systems on the ham bands, I 
use FLDIGI for receiving all sorts of signals, and have modified the 
open source code (waterfall) for a totally different interest.
I could do this because the information was freely available.
On another, probably more contentious, issue that you raised you 
mentioned that of operating systems! and choices.
As you so correctly pointed out most people don't care, and probably 
wouldn't even know what system was giving them their internet access or 
email or poetry writing ability or photo sharing or.

Isn't ham radio a little different?
Are we not interested in the nuances of the closed source versus open 
source systems that we may choose to use?
I certainly know where my interest is, and it is most certainly not in 
closed source systems.
Want to know a recent reason why closed source software is a 
REALLY,REALLY bad idea? Try Googling Stuxnet and then follow the leads 
from there.
Really scary, if you live in a country that uses an internet based 
control system...USA,GB, France, Italy, Germany,etc
Open source, or at least scrutiny would have identified the stupidity of 
global passwords and non changing access passwords!

  Another point that you inferred (and I could be wrong here) that we 
should accept and use commercial systems (DSTAR?) because they are 
available and are being pushed (hard) by oneONE ONLY... manufacturer 
, well I don't subscribe to that mindset.
I fully understand that JARL instigated this system for their own 
reasons, but I fail to see why the rest of the world should be captive 
to a system that has to use closed source components to function.
Which is where we started I think.
Cheers and (open source wishes!)

Don
ZL1THO.
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-29 Thread Gregg Wonderly
On 4/29/2011 3:23 AM, don wrote:
 Hi Greg,
 Sorry to say this, but your analogy to just another component is 
 plain wrong. The vocoder cannot be replaced by another generic component as 
 far as I can ascertain. I cant' even find the algorithms that would allow me 
 to program a DSPIC or fpga at home in my meager lab to perform any of the 
 functions in the codec.

I am not suggesting that you create your own version of that codec Don.  I am 
suggesting that you can put this codec into a design to make it work with 
D-Star 
now.  Later, if another codec becomes popular, if you've done the design right, 
you could plug in another codec that would change the form of the coded data 
and 
recognize that form for decoding and presto, you swap in the new codec and you 
don't have to worry about being dependent on D-Star.  In a sense, this is 
exactly the thing that the FM-USB-LSB-Digital knob does on your existing 
multi-mode rig.

You just have to think about D-Star as a mode, and not as a rig or a 
standard and move on to experimenting with what you can master instead of 
only 
what you can make.

Gregg Wonderly
W5GGW
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-28 Thread Gregg Wonderly
One of the ways to look at the voice codec is as a capacitor, amplifier or 
some other component of you circuit design.  Sure, it's single source, but if 
you are careful about how you put it in, you can provide a switched circuit, 
daughter board or some other path to alternative codecs.  It just depends on 
what your real desire is, and how complicated you want to make your system.
I.e; if you are worried about designing a system with a single source codec, 
don't design it that way.

Sure we have open systems, but we also have single source systems, like 
windows. 
  Many many people are content with saying, if it doesn't run on windows, I'm 
not interested in it because that's all they've ever used.  Or, even worse, I'm 
not supporting anything but windows because I don't know how to do that on 
Linux, or Mac or B-OS or...  Look at what is happening with Apple.  Every 
quarter they are reporting explosive growth in Mac sales (2x from same period a 
year ago for this past quarter) and other items.  That is completely single 
source stuff, but you can run windows or linux on a mac.  People are finding 
value in the package they see and are switching horses so to speak.

Everywhere in life we get to make choices, measure the good vs bad with our own 
skills and experiences etc. In the end, our choices and experiences are 
controlled if not limited by any decision we make.

Don't think about this from the single vendor perspective.  Think about this 
from the what can I do with this technology perspective that is that heart of 
HAM radio experimentation.

Clearly ICOM is now understanding that if you can't access a repeater with 
digital data services, then paying 2x the cost of an analog rig of the same 
caliber just doesn't make sense to most people.  Also, as this discussion has 
illustrated, some of us have no interest in the whole of digital coded data and 
voice.

Gregg Wonderly

On 4/27/2011 9:33 PM, Tony Langdon wrote:
 At 11:33 AM 4/28/2011, you wrote:

 I'd like to point out that it's difficult, at best, to participate when
 you can't roll your own.  There are many codecs available out there
 today that don't require purchasing a license to use.  The biggest
 problem right now is that D-Star isn't backward compatible or you could
 implement one of those freely-licensed codecs now and let people design
 their own implementation.

 Tell that to the likes of G4KLX, KI4LKF, the ircDDB team, PA4YBR, the
 designers and builders of various GMSK modems, and even AA4RC and
 Moe, who designed the DV Dongle hardware (not to mention those who
 are building their own Dongles).  Sure, the codec is proprietary, but
 there are implementations available, from a bare chip (at around $20)
 to the DV Dongle for people to play with.  And there's a LOT of
 tinkering to be done without even decoding the audio, as many of the
 above people can attest to first hand.  As far as I'm concerned, this
 argument is a furphy.  There are open source implementations for just
 about everything else - gateways, repeaters, GMSK modem (using a
 soundcard), routing advertisements (ircDDB), everything except DPlus
 (though there is an open source functional equivalent - DExtra).

 73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
 http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star -to- A-STAR Gateway

2011-04-28 Thread Tony Langdon
At 06:38 AM 4/29/2011, Bob Bruninga wrote:
  Tell that to the likes of G4KLX, KI4LKF, the ircDDB team,
  PA4YBR, the designers and builders of various GMSK modems,
  and even AA4RC and Moe, who designed the DV Dongle hardware...

The real thing that would explode D-star onto the world stage would be if
they implemented an A-STAR gateway into the D-STAR system.  That is a means
to gateway to existing analog users with existing radios.  Then everyone
everywhere could participate in callsign-to-callsign voice contact just like
D-star.

Bob, you're going to get a LOT of resistance to this from the D-STAR 
community.  The idea has merit, and APRS could provide a data channel 
for passing routing information.  Unfortunately, there's a lot of 
purists out there in the D-STAR world.  You might get more traction 
for the idea by going to the ircDDB community, where there's a higher 
proportion of experimenters.  Your A-STAR gateway would likely need 
to be registered with ircDDB (USTRUST/K5TIT certainly wouldn't 
register it), so it would look like a D-STAR gateway to the 
network.  The more I think about it, the more I think there's 
something in this.


The A-Star gateway does this.  It uses the built-in (APRS) digital signaling
in any of the 8 current models of Kenwood and Yaesu APRS radios to provide
the seamless interface.  The APRS radios can be configured to send out their
CALLSIGN with each release of PTT, thus giving the automatic callsign
identification (Like Dstar).  Further, APRS radio users can signal who they
want to talk to by simply entering an APRS message to the intended callsign
target.

Can the message be sent on every key down?  i.e. store the message 
and then program the radio to repeat the same message every time you 
hit PTT?  This is what would be needed to use D-STAR's callsign 
routing.  I noticed there's quite a few APRS capable radios out there 
now.  I was almost tempted to buy one, but that came after knowing I 
have to watch the budget for the time being.  It's on the wish list.


This is all part of the Automatic Voice Relay Network concept that ties
together all linked voice systems into a universal-by-callsign VOIP system.
It is where APRS has been headed since 2001.  And it is why all the recent
radios from Kenwood and Yaesu can include their operating frequency in their
ID packet and why they can also QSY to a commanded frequency on an incoming
message with the press of a single button.

Unfortunately, in Australia, we will have to keep D-STAR (and any 
A-STAR gateways would be considered as part of D-STAR for this 
purpose) separate to IRLP and Echolink, because bridging the two 
would lead to a very high risk of licence breaches, due to how our 
regulations work, combined with the bands that the IRLP and Echolink 
systems are on (A-STAR gateways would be advertised as such and CTCSS 
access to avoid accidental access by Foundation calls and the legal 
implications thereof).


We just need someone to write the A-star gateway software into the D-star
network.

I suggest you ask around the ircDDB community, as that's where the 
software development and home brew gateway efforts are centred, 
because there's much more room for experimentation there than on 
K5TIT.  The idea is interesting and certainly has merit.

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-27 Thread Gregg Wonderly
So as every followup seems to have detailed, there is an increase in desired 
bandwidth with a direct need in required spectrum.  If we can reduce spectrum, 
we increase distance the signal can transit.  If we increase bandwidth for a 
particular size spectrum, we improve the amount of information we send.

The problems with current voice compression being understood have to do with 
remedial compression techniques based on available compute power.  I suggested 
FPGA because of exactly this issue.  Sure, people pick the easy route because 
they can buy those solutions and get into the marketplace faster.  What needs 
to 
happen is the Apple thing.  We need a company that actually cares enough 
about 
the quality of what it can ship, worries about power requirements and optimizes 
performance to create a truly awesome voice CODEC standard.

The cell phone market keeps trying to optimize the bandwidth needs to increase 
their spectrum's available capacity.

We are frustrated by the attributes of AM-VSB television characteristics vs 
ATSC 
coded VSB television.  Because, the minimal available information transitions 
to 
no available information in a very short distance and signal level change.  
Thus 
we can't hear the TV at least.  Either we get everything, or we get nothing.

This is where we are at with digital emission standards at this point.  It's 
not 
the perfect solution because we are not sending enough information to recreate 
a 
perfect version of the original audio sample, for audio stuff.  But, we are 
able 
to use the complete 12.5khz that D-Star is using (down from 20khz wide band FM 
is at now, and less than half of the old 30khz stuff that the old mobile phone 
radios were using).  That 12.5khz has 2 channels in it.  One for voice an done 
for data.  So more information is bandwidth is available.

This is one of those experimentation moments.  Not everyone is happy with where 
it is at, but without some more participation, those experimenting now will be 
the ones setting the standards, and if you are not happy with those results, it 
will be your fault not theirs, because you chose not to participate.

Gregg Wonderly
W5GGW

On 4/25/2011 6:10 AM, Ben Jackson wrote:
 On 4/23/2011 2:42 PM, Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
 On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 10:42 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
 In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more 
 and
 more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully

 Okay, but *why*?  Why are we so obsessed with squeezing bandwidth down
 and down, at the expense of intelligibility?

 You unfortunately provided data on why we should get ahead of crunching
 down bandwidth: Because sooner or later, we're going to get squeezed for
 bandwidth due to our spectrum being fairly empty and everyone and their
 brother wanting to push IP to their new wireless toaster service.

 I'm not a fan of proprietary codecs but our lack of an alternative back
 in the 2000s caused D-STAR to be used with AMBE. Too bad, so sad. Don't
 support it, probably not going to use it. My worry is that even though
 we provided a alternative with Codec2, what cutting edge technology that
 will be here five years from now are we not developing because we were
 playing catch up?

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-27 Thread Eric Christensen
On Wed, 2011-04-27 at 09:00 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
 This is one of those experimentation moments.  Not everyone is happy with 
 where 
 it is at, but without some more participation, those experimenting now will 
 be 
 the ones setting the standards, and if you are not happy with those results, 
 it 
 will be your fault not theirs, because you chose not to participate.

I'd like to point out that it's difficult, at best, to participate when
you can't roll your own.  There are many codecs available out there
today that don't require purchasing a license to use.  The biggest
problem right now is that D-Star isn't backward compatible or you could
implement one of those freely-licensed codecs now and let people design
their own implementation.

Packet radio, however, is a good example of an open project.  AX25 is
the basis for packet radio and since the specification was released it
allowed anyone to design and develop their own software and hardware
systems.  Take a subset of that project, APRS, and you'll see this even
more.  How many software clients are out there that use the APRS
specification as a means to communicate with other APRS users?  Kenwood,
Byonics, and Yaesu, among others, have all made hardware devices
utilizing the APRS and AX25 open specifications and more will come.

Open is better and until all the pieces are freely available you won't
catch one of these devices on my side.

--Eric W4OTN

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-27 Thread Tony Langdon
At 11:33 AM 4/28/2011, you wrote:

I'd like to point out that it's difficult, at best, to participate when
you can't roll your own.  There are many codecs available out there
today that don't require purchasing a license to use.  The biggest
problem right now is that D-Star isn't backward compatible or you could
implement one of those freely-licensed codecs now and let people design
their own implementation.

Tell that to the likes of G4KLX, KI4LKF, the ircDDB team, PA4YBR, the 
designers and builders of various GMSK modems, and even AA4RC and 
Moe, who designed the DV Dongle hardware (not to mention those who 
are building their own Dongles).  Sure, the codec is proprietary, but 
there are implementations available, from a bare chip (at around $20) 
to the DV Dongle for people to play with.  And there's a LOT of 
tinkering to be done without even decoding the audio, as many of the 
above people can attest to first hand.  As far as I'm concerned, this 
argument is a furphy.  There are open source implementations for just 
about everything else - gateways, repeaters, GMSK modem (using a 
soundcard), routing advertisements (ircDDB), everything except DPlus 
(though there is an open source functional equivalent - DExtra).

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-27 Thread Ben Jackson
On 04/27/2011 09:33 PM, Eric Christensen wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-04-27 at 09:00 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
 This is one of those experimentation moments.  Not everyone is happy with 
 where
 it is at, but without some more participation, those experimenting now will 
 be
 the ones setting the standards, and if you are not happy with those results, 
 it
 will be your fault not theirs, because you chose not to participate.

 I'd like to point out that it's difficult, at best, to participate when
 you can't roll your own.

See, while I don't like AMBE, that's a bunch of shenanigans. You can 
roll your own stuff with D-STAR:

http://www.gmskhotspot.com/
http://www.w9arp.com/hotspot/
http://www.d-star.asia/index.html.en

 Packet radio, however, is a good example of an open project.  AX25 is
 the basis for packet radio and since the specification was released it
 allowed anyone to design and develop their own software and hardware
 systems.  Take a subset of that project, APRS, and you'll see this even
 more.  How many software clients are out there that use the APRS
 specification as a means to communicate with other APRS users?  Kenwood,
 Byonics, and Yaesu, among others, have all made hardware devices
 utilizing the APRS and AX25 open specifications and more will come.

D-STAR *is* an open protocol. D-STAR Audio, however, has a codec that is 
encumbered by patents, I'm not touching AMBE, but I enjoy the idea of a 
digital data mode developed within the past decade. Don't throw the baby 
out with the bathwater.

-- 
Ben Jackson - N1WBV - New Bedford, MA
bbj at innismir.net - http://www.innismir.net/
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-25 Thread Ben Jackson
On 4/23/2011 2:42 PM, Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
 On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 10:42 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
 In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more and
 more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully

 Okay, but *why*?  Why are we so obsessed with squeezing bandwidth down
 and down, at the expense of intelligibility?

You unfortunately provided data on why we should get ahead of crunching 
down bandwidth: Because sooner or later, we're going to get squeezed for 
bandwidth due to our spectrum being fairly empty and everyone and their 
brother wanting to push IP to their new wireless toaster service.

I'm not a fan of proprietary codecs but our lack of an alternative back 
in the 2000s caused D-STAR to be used with AMBE. Too bad, so sad. Don't 
support it, probably not going to use it. My worry is that even though 
we provided a alternative with Codec2, what cutting edge technology that 
will be here five years from now are we not developing because we were 
playing catch up?

-- 
Ben Jackson - N1WBV - New Bedford, MA
bbj at innismir.net - http://www.innismir.net/
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Art McBride
Tony,
How it happened in the HDTV world is the transmitting stations pay huge
royalties for the IP. You do not see any CH3 adapters for HDTV. Separate
royalties are required for video and sound and no provisions, for Amateur
Radio experimentation using HDTV has been made. 

Amateur Radio is a DIY, learn by doing hobby that also provide services to
the public. We have no revenue stream to pay for equipment royalties.

D-Star Codec royalties are with in reach ($22.00 for a codec) and it is an
open protocol. It has multipath and synchronization problems. Amateurs are
currently experimenting with D-Star HB modem/controllers and radio
equipment. As with D-Star home brewing will need to transition from
individual to group efforts for new projects.

Satellites will play an increasing role in digital communications as
multipath can be dealt with effectively using circular polarization and
directive antennas. Most digital systems are not very multipath friendly. 

Amateur Radio weak Signal work and contesting most likely will remain with
the basic modulation systems. High Power density digital modulation signals
do not work well when there are weak or multiple signals present. 

The AM aircraft band is still with us. The digital world still has not given
us a reliable system to allow for the hearing of a beat telling the A/C
controller there is a weak station present as well as copy the stronger
signal without asking the stronger signal for a repeat.

Art, 
KC6UQH
-Original Message-
From: amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org] On
Behalf Of Tony Langdon
Sent: Saturday, April 23, 2011 2:33 PM
To: Gregg Wonderly; Gordon JC Pearce
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

At 01:42 AM 4/24/2011, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more
and
more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully
simple to do.  I don't really believe that D-Star is the right choice for
everything because it is single source.  But, so is Microsoft windows,

There's no one size fits all.  D-STAR has its place, and being the 
new kid on the block, it's open to a lot of tinkering.

MacOS-X, and many other software based systems.  If you are an FPGA 
programmer,
perhaps you can build an FPGA based CODEC for amateur radio that 
would do voice
compression etc.  But in the end, you also have to have an 
transmitter with the
appropriate bandwidth output to reduce the spectrum used.

Well, maybe one day someone will package something like Codec2 into a 
chip.  That will be a good day for ham radio, BUT it'll never make 
D-STAR.  Why?  Because it's not in the spec and will break the 
existing installed hardware base.  However, the future is likely to 
consist of multimode radios, which can handle multiple codecs and 
protocols, and which will be capable of having a yet unknown cocecs 
installed in the field.  Also, eventually the DVSI patent will run 
out, just like the patent for SSB did many years ago.

The simple fact is that HAM radio emission standards (simple voice
modulated
with some simple emission standard) are now more than a century old.   As

Not quite.  CW certainly is, AM is around the century mark, I think 
SSB is a little over 80 years old from its first conception, and FM 
is 75 years old. :)

capable as they are, the abilities they present seem minimal to 
some.  I think
that there are great things about them because they do allow long distance
communications which the HAM community regularly uses to support distant
operations which provide aid to areas struck by natural disaster.

I think this is one area where ham radio will be increasingly 
important.  Alongside the newer modes, it can also be a living 
museum where older modes can live on.  The only mode that hasn't 
survived is spark gap Morse, because it's so spectrally inefficient 
it became illegal.  So ham radio, while it still does advance the art 
also preserves the art as well, and both are important functions to 
me.  If something happened that required falling back to older analog 
modes, there's a pool of experienced operators on hand, who know he 
quirks that the commercial world will forget.


But, we all have to understand that it costs money to do anything new and
different.  People experimenting with stuff is great, but it 
minimizes who can
participate if you have to build it or pay a lot.   That's just life in
general.  You can't participate in everything unless you have the 
resources to
do that.

And there's experimentation.  I don't have the background and 
resources to play at a low hardware or software level, but at a 
higher level, equivalent to mashups on the Internet I have played 
and still do.


In the US, any digital communications that is coded in some way only needs
to
have a publicly visible document detailing how it works for the FCC 
regulations
to be met.   Other places in the world may have different requirements

[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Sebastian
Never heard of WSJT?

Amateurs who are serious about weak signal work have been using that for years, 
for both terrestrial communications, and moonbounce on VHF and above.  

And it's also being used quite often now on HF.   10 meters is good example.  
When propagation doesn't allow for SSB, you'll find signals on 28.076.

Those signals won't appear on a scanner, HT or spectrum analyser; but chances 
are that someone is using the band(s).

73 de Sebastian, W4AS



On Apr 24, 2011, at 2:01 PM, Art McBride wrote:

 Amateur Radio weak Signal work and contesting most likely will remain with
 the basic modulation systems. High Power density digital modulation signals
 do not work well when there are weak or multiple signals present. 


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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Diane Bruce
On Sun, Apr 24, 2011 at 02:36:37PM -0400, Sebastian wrote:
 Never heard of WSJT?

Never heard of it.

- 73 Diane VA3DB 
-- 
- d...@freebsd.org d...@db.net http://www.db.net/~db
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Edward R. Cole
At 11:18 AM 4/24/2011, Diane Bruce wrote:
On Sun, Apr 24, 2011 at 02:36:37PM -0400, Sebastian wrote:
  Never heard of WSJT?

Never heard of it.

- 73 Diane VA3DB
--

Diane,

I'm surprised as involved in mw as you are.

Here is a link to the software:
http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/

Joe Taylor, K1JT, was a professor (now emeritus) at Princeton and a 
Noble Laureate for his work with Pulsars.

He first wrote FSK-441 as a digital mode for meteor scatter which has 
essentially replaced high speed CW as the primary mode on ms.  Then 
he developed a weak-signal program for eme about 2002 (it is nearing 
ten years).  The group of programs was bundled into a suite called 
WSJT (weak-signal JT).  The prime mode for 2m eme is now JT-65; CW 
has been largely replaced.  JT-65 uses noise reduction algorithms 
taken from the Reed-Solomon sw that is used for NR on DVD's.  JT-65 
is a very narrow band digital mode occupying only 4.7 Hz, thus it 
demonstrates SNR  10 dB over CW.  It is a synchronous digital mode 
so it requires precise timing and frequency.  Most users use internet 
sw to maintain their computer time 1 sec error.

One offshoot is the propagation beacon sw, WSPR whisper, which is 
very popular on HF for determining band conditions.  Many stations 
only run 1w or less with the sw.
http://wsprnet.org/drupal/

Maybe you have heard of these programs but not under the name of the 
bundled suite (WSJT).



73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message - 
From: Edward R. Cole kl...@acsalaska.net
To: Diane Bruce d...@db.net
Cc: amsat-bb amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Sunday, April 24, 2011 9:49 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star


 The prime mode for 2m eme is now JT-65; CW 
 has been largely replaced.
 
 73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45

Hi Ed, KL7UW

I am anxious about that because even on EME very soon
nobody will be able to use by hand a CW key and copy
Morse Code by ears.

I am sorry because I like very much the CW sound in my 
ears.

CW is like music for me and after to eliminate the Radio
Officers over the ships we radio hams we actually should
be the last frontier for the CW existence.

73 de

i8CVS Domenico
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Tony Langdon
At 07:43 AM 4/25/2011, i8cvs wrote:

I am anxious about that because even on EME very soon
nobody will be able to use by hand a CW key and copy
Morse Code by ears.

I don't think Morse is in any danger.  I've seen an increase in 
interest since the compulsory Morse exams were dropped in this part 
of the world, particularly among younger people.  I think it would be 
a shame to see Morse go, and there's a real opportunity for those who 
are proficient to show the newcomers the joys and elegant simplicity 
of CW.  I don't think you'll have a shortage of students, now that 
Morse is both optional and something only in history outside of amateur radio.


I am sorry because I like very much the CW sound in my
ears.

CW is like music for me and after to eliminate the Radio
Officers over the ships we radio hams we actually should
be the last frontier for the CW existence.

You can keep the torch burning.  Unfortunately, I haven't had the 
chance to get to a level I'd be comfortable using on air, that might 
be a project for later in life, when there's less distractions, since 
I find the idea of Morse very attractive also.  It's a pity the old 
exams emphasised slow speeds, I'd have done better had I learned at 
more useful speeds. :/

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-24 Thread Edward R. Cole
At 01:43 PM 4/24/2011, i8cvs wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Edward R. Cole kl...@acsalaska.net
To: Diane Bruce d...@db.net
Cc: amsat-bb amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Sunday, April 24, 2011 9:49 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star


  The prime mode for 2m eme is now JT-65; CW
  has been largely replaced.
 
  73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45

Hi Ed, KL7UW

I am anxious about that because even on EME very soon
nobody will be able to use by hand a CW key and copy
Morse Code by ears.

I am sorry because I like very much the CW sound in my
ears.

CW is like music for me and after to eliminate the Radio
Officers over the ships we radio hams we actually should
be the last frontier for the CW existence.

73 de

i8CVS Domenico

You can still do eme on CW, just it will take a bigger antenna array 
and 1000w to be heard.  JT-65 enables a station with a couple 10 
element yagis or one longer yagi and 150w the ability to do eme on 
2m.  That is a huge attraction.

One takes about $5,000 and the other $500-800.  You see the 10-dB 
advantage applies to the cost as well! ;-)

CW is still prevalent on eme at 1296 and above.  I still hear plenty 
of CW around 14.020.  It is the main mode used on LF and MW.  but 
digital modes are demonstrating they are superior in weak-signal as 
well as emcomm.

WSPR on 10-MHz has been copied at 120 microwatts.



73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Tony Langdon
At 07:33 PM 4/23/2011, you wrote:

The chips are readily available at a few hundred dollars apiece, and
if you attempt to implement your own AMBE codec then you're going to
have DVSI's lawyers jumping on you.

More like $20 apiece in small (possible 1 off) quantities.


Proprietary software has no place in Amateur Radio.

It's hardware with firmware.  So let's throw out all the other 
proprietary bits (processors with embedded code, etc) and go back to 
soldering valves?

The simple fact of the matter was back around 2000 when the D-STAR 
spec was developed, there weren't a lot of choices for how to 
compress speech into 2.4kbps and have FEC.  AND have it available in 
a suitable form for implementation into mobile and handheld 
radios.  While the proprietary codec is a minor inconvenience in some 
situations, it's proved to be no impediment to home brew enhancements 
to D-STAR.  The number of ham developed D-STAR projects is 
significant, so that one chip hasn't proved to be an impediment to 
ham experimentation in practice.

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Gordon JC Pearce
On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 20:00 +1000, Tony Langdon wrote:
 At 07:33 PM 4/23/2011, you wrote:
 
 The chips are readily available at a few hundred dollars apiece, and
 if you attempt to implement your own AMBE codec then you're going to
 have DVSI's lawyers jumping on you.
 
 More like $20 apiece in small (possible 1 off) quantities.

I'd love to know where you're seeing them for that much in onesy-twoesy
quantities

 Proprietary software has no place in Amateur Radio.
 
 It's hardware with firmware.  So let's throw out all the other 
 proprietary bits (processors with embedded code, etc) and go back to 
 soldering valves?

Yes, throw out the proprietary bits.  Write your own, it's easy.

 The simple fact of the matter was back around 2000 when the D-STAR 
 spec was developed, there weren't a lot of choices for how to 
 compress speech into 2.4kbps and have FEC.  AND have it available in 
 a suitable form for implementation into mobile and handheld 
 radios.  While the proprietary codec is a minor inconvenience in some 
 situations, it's proved to be no impediment to home brew enhancements 
 to D-STAR.  The number of ham developed D-STAR projects is 
 significant, so that one chip hasn't proved to be an impediment to 
 ham experimentation in practice.

Yes, back around 2000.  It's over ten years old.  We have better
codecs and better modulation schemes now.  Why are we crippling digital
comms with a single-source proprietary codec that sounds like an angry
duck in a tin outhouse?

The commercial world is no better - just look at DMR, which uses the
same awful AMBE codec!

Gordon MM0YEQ

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Gregg Wonderly
In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more and 
more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully 
simple to do.  I don't really believe that D-Star is the right choice for 
everything because it is single source.  But, so is Microsoft windows, 
MacOS-X, and many other software based systems.  If you are an FPGA programmer, 
perhaps you can build an FPGA based CODEC for amateur radio that would do voice 
compression etc.  But in the end, you also have to have an transmitter with the 
appropriate bandwidth output to reduce the spectrum used.

It's by no means a simple task.  Everything in a radio system has to change to 
do spectrum conservation or provide high speed digital data transmission.

The simple fact is that HAM radio emission standards (simple voice modulated 
with some simple emission standard) are now more than a century old.   As 
capable as they are, the abilities they present seem minimal to some.  I think 
that there are great things about them because they do allow long distance 
communications which the HAM community regularly uses to support distant 
operations which provide aid to areas struck by natural disaster.

But, we all have to understand that it costs money to do anything new and 
different.  People experimenting with stuff is great, but it minimizes who can 
participate if you have to build it or pay a lot.   That's just life in 
general.  You can't participate in everything unless you have the resources to 
do that.

In the US, any digital communications that is coded in some way only needs to 
have a publicly visible document detailing how it works for the FCC regulations 
to be met.   Other places in the world may have different requirements and 
that's nothing new is it?

Gregg Wonderly
W5GGW

On 4/23/2011 5:37 AM, Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
 On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 20:00 +1000, Tony Langdon wrote:
 At 07:33 PM 4/23/2011, you wrote:

 The chips are readily available at a few hundred dollars apiece, and
 if you attempt to implement your own AMBE codec then you're going to
 have DVSI's lawyers jumping on you.
 More like $20 apiece in small (possible 1 off) quantities.
 I'd love to know where you're seeing them for that much in onesy-twoesy
 quantities

 Proprietary software has no place in Amateur Radio.
 It's hardware with firmware.  So let's throw out all the other
 proprietary bits (processors with embedded code, etc) and go back to
 soldering valves?
 Yes, throw out the proprietary bits.  Write your own, it's easy.

 The simple fact of the matter was back around 2000 when the D-STAR
 spec was developed, there weren't a lot of choices for how to
 compress speech into 2.4kbps and have FEC.  AND have it available in
 a suitable form for implementation into mobile and handheld
 radios.  While the proprietary codec is a minor inconvenience in some
 situations, it's proved to be no impediment to home brew enhancements
 to D-STAR.  The number of ham developed D-STAR projects is
 significant, so that one chip hasn't proved to be an impediment to
 ham experimentation in practice.
 Yes, back around 2000.  It's over ten years old.  We have better
 codecs and better modulation schemes now.  Why are we crippling digital
 comms with a single-source proprietary codec that sounds like an angry
 duck in a tin outhouse?

 The commercial world is no better - just look at DMR, which uses the
 same awful AMBE codec!

 Gordon MM0YEQ

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Gordon JC Pearce
On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 10:42 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
 In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more and 
 more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully 

Okay, but *why*?  Why are we so obsessed with squeezing bandwidth down
and down, at the expense of intelligibility?

I've got my spectrum analyser hooked up to my 2m aerial at the moment.
For the past half hour it has indicated the odd little spike at
144.800MHz indicating a little bit of (weak) APRS traffic, a big spike
at the output of GB3CS (because it's line-of-sight), a couple of
slightly smaller spikes from the other two local repeaters (PA and KE)
and a bump where FE, FF and AY are supposed to be (they're quite weak
here).

Other than about 300kHz of repeater outputs and 25kHz of packet, the
rest of the 2m band is *empty*.

If I switch it to scan 70cm, I'll see GB3KV (co-sited with CS) and
nothing else, except the odd satellite up around 435MHz and a brief
burst when my heating oil tank gauge decides to tell me I need to buy
more oil.

I could safely use channels 250kHz wide on 70cm, if I had a mind to do
so.  It wouldn't get in anyone's way, because there's no-one there to
annoy.  This is even more true of 23cm, and higher.  We've got loads of
space to play with, on all the bands except 30m and 60m which have their
own kind of charm.  

 simple to do.  I don't really believe that D-Star is the right choice for 
 everything because it is single source.  But, so is Microsoft windows, 
 MacOS-X, and many other software based systems.  If you are an FPGA 
 programmer, 
 perhaps you can build an FPGA based CODEC for amateur radio that would do 
 voice 
 compression etc.  But in the end, you also have to have an transmitter with 
 the 
 appropriate bandwidth output to reduce the spectrum used.

This is where D-Star falls down - it's *still* just a 12.5kHz-wide
channel.  Without getting into linear PAs and the like, it's going to be
quite hard to do anything else and have a useful data rate.

As for FPGAs, why not just use a cheap general-purpose DSP or even CPU?
That's what people tend to end up implementing on the FPGA anyway.

Gordon MM0YEQ

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Tony Langdon
At 01:42 AM 4/24/2011, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to happen more and
more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is painfully
simple to do.  I don't really believe that D-Star is the right choice for
everything because it is single source.  But, so is Microsoft windows,

There's no one size fits all.  D-STAR has its place, and being the 
new kid on the block, it's open to a lot of tinkering.

MacOS-X, and many other software based systems.  If you are an FPGA 
programmer,
perhaps you can build an FPGA based CODEC for amateur radio that 
would do voice
compression etc.  But in the end, you also have to have an 
transmitter with the
appropriate bandwidth output to reduce the spectrum used.

Well, maybe one day someone will package something like Codec2 into a 
chip.  That will be a good day for ham radio, BUT it'll never make 
D-STAR.  Why?  Because it's not in the spec and will break the 
existing installed hardware base.  However, the future is likely to 
consist of multimode radios, which can handle multiple codecs and 
protocols, and which will be capable of having a yet unknown cocecs 
installed in the field.  Also, eventually the DVSI patent will run 
out, just like the patent for SSB did many years ago.

The simple fact is that HAM radio emission standards (simple voice modulated
with some simple emission standard) are now more than a century old.   As

Not quite.  CW certainly is, AM is around the century mark, I think 
SSB is a little over 80 years old from its first conception, and FM 
is 75 years old. :)

capable as they are, the abilities they present seem minimal to 
some.  I think
that there are great things about them because they do allow long distance
communications which the HAM community regularly uses to support distant
operations which provide aid to areas struck by natural disaster.

I think this is one area where ham radio will be increasingly 
important.  Alongside the newer modes, it can also be a living 
museum where older modes can live on.  The only mode that hasn't 
survived is spark gap Morse, because it's so spectrally inefficient 
it became illegal.  So ham radio, while it still does advance the art 
also preserves the art as well, and both are important functions to 
me.  If something happened that required falling back to older analog 
modes, there's a pool of experienced operators on hand, who know he 
quirks that the commercial world will forget.


But, we all have to understand that it costs money to do anything new and
different.  People experimenting with stuff is great, but it 
minimizes who can
participate if you have to build it or pay a lot.   That's just life in
general.  You can't participate in everything unless you have the 
resources to
do that.

And there's experimentation.  I don't have the background and 
resources to play at a low hardware or software level, but at a 
higher level, equivalent to mashups on the Internet I have played 
and still do.


In the US, any digital communications that is coded in some way only needs to
have a publicly visible document detailing how it works for the FCC 
regulations
to be met.   Other places in the world may have different requirements and
that's nothing new is it?

Requirements here are much the same as the US, somewhat more liberal 
when it comes to modulation and coding.  Basically there are two 
things that matter.  (1) Not to exceed the maximum necessary 
bandwidth (D-STAR fits on all bands except 2200m), and (2) The coding 
must not be for the purpose of obscuring the meaning of the 
message.  D-STAR certainly fits, because radios are readily 
available, and they don't need encryption keys.

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-23 Thread Tony Langdon
At 04:42 AM 4/24/2011, Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
On Sat, 2011-04-23 at 10:42 -0500, Gregg Wonderly wrote:
  In the end, digital compression of spectrum space is going to 
 happen more and
  more.  AM style broadcast is hugely inefficient even though it is 
 painfully

Okay, but *why*?  Why are we so obsessed with squeezing bandwidth down
and down, at the expense of intelligibility?

I find D-STAR more intelligible than a significant proportion of FM 
transmissions.  And why are we obsessed with reducing bandwidth?  2 reasons:

1.  It's economics, bandwidth is expensive in the commercial world, 
and in the ham world, some countries are suffering congestion.

2.  Reducing the amount of information to be transmitted means more 
range (Shannon's Law).  And don't we all want a bit more range in the 
ham world?


I've got my spectrum analyser hooked up to my 2m aerial at the moment.
For the past half hour it has indicated the odd little spike at
144.800MHz indicating a little bit of (weak) APRS traffic, a big spike
at the output of GB3CS (because it's line-of-sight), a couple of
slightly smaller spikes from the other two local repeaters (PA and KE)
and a bump where FE, FF and AY are supposed to be (they're quite weak
here).

Well, everyone's in a different situation.  I have had days in 
Melbourne where it's hard to find a free 2m simplex frequency.  I'm 
certain in the US there's places where 2m is congested.  Sure, where 
I am now, 2m is fairly quite, but I'm outside the big cities, and 
separated from Melbourne by a mountain range.  With only a few dozen 
hams in the area, bandwidth usage isn't a high priority issue, but 
that's not going to stop me playing with narrowband voice modes.

This is where D-Star falls down - it's *still* just a 12.5kHz-wide
channel.  Without getting into linear PAs and the like, it's going to be
quite hard to do anything else and have a useful data rate.

We do have linear PAs available on VHF and UHF...  We could always do 
FDMDV on 70cm to really save bandwidth. ;)

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-22 Thread Clint Bradford
 ... They shouldn't be allowed to sell them for use on the amateur bands.
Aren't secret codes illegal?

I didn't know that the transmission of one's callsign and GPS coordinates was 
illegal ...

And of course it isn't. 

 ... it's not really amateur radio ...

It seems you do not like this mode of operation. But to demean it by tossing in 
hints of it 
being universally illegal is an irresponsible and immature tactic, IHMO.

Clint Bradford, K6LCS
http://www.k6lcs.com


--
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http://www.clintbradford.com
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[amsat-bb] Re: Icom D-Star

2011-04-22 Thread Gordon JC Pearce
On Fri, 2011-04-22 at 12:29 -0700, Clint Bradford wrote:
  ... They shouldn't be allowed to sell them for use on the amateur bands.
 Aren't secret codes illegal?
 
 I didn't know that the transmission of one's callsign and GPS coordinates was 
 illegal ...
 
 And of course it isn't. 
 

No, but transmission using secret codes is.

How, *exactly*, does DStar work?  Be sure to include a full and accurate
description of how each frame of audio is compressed...

Gordon MM0YEQ

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