Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] See a demo of our new USRP as DEFCON
Yes, it will fall back to USB 2.0, which reduces the bandwidth. Matt On Fri, Aug 2, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Tom Rondeau t...@trondeau.com wrote: On Thu, Aug 1, 2013 at 8:10 PM, Matt Ettus m...@ettus.com wrote: For those lucky enough to be going to DEFCON, Balint Seeber (our applications engineer) will be presenting All Your RFz Are Belong to Me -- Hacking the Wireless World with SDR, in Track 4 from 10 AM to 11:45. He will be running all of his demos on the USRP B200, which we are going to release very soon. The low-cost B200 has frequency coverage of 50 MHz to 6 GHz, with 56 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth (at 61.44 MS/s) over a USB 3 interface. The B210 adds 2x2 MIMO capability and a bigger FPGA. The device is bus-powered so there is no need for an external power supply. It *already* runs GNU Radio, OpenBTS, LTE, and anything else that runs on our other USRPs. Balint's talks are always very exciting, so be sure to check it out if you are at the conference. He is going to demonstrate RFID hacking (on FastTrak toll passes), LTE, OpenBTS, and numerous other applications he has developed. For those not lucky enough to be there, here is a brief taste of it: http://t.co/GyCijVunPx Matt Matt, That's great! I'm really looking forward to seeing it in action. Just a question that I'm sure you've addressed somewhere already, but is there any fall-back support to work off USB 2.0? -- Tom Visit us at GRCon13 Oct. 1 - 4 http://www.trondeau.com/grcon13 ___ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] See a demo of our new USRP as DEFCON
On Thu, Aug 1, 2013 at 8:10 PM, Matt Ettus m...@ettus.com wrote: For those lucky enough to be going to DEFCON, Balint Seeber (our applications engineer) will be presenting All Your RFz Are Belong to Me -- Hacking the Wireless World with SDR, in Track 4 from 10 AM to 11:45. He will be running all of his demos on the USRP B200, which we are going to release very soon. The low-cost B200 has frequency coverage of 50 MHz to 6 GHz, with 56 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth (at 61.44 MS/s) over a USB 3 interface. The B210 adds 2x2 MIMO capability and a bigger FPGA. The device is bus-powered so there is no need for an external power supply. It *already* runs GNU Radio, OpenBTS, LTE, and anything else that runs on our other USRPs. Balint's talks are always very exciting, so be sure to check it out if you are at the conference. He is going to demonstrate RFID hacking (on FastTrak toll passes), LTE, OpenBTS, and numerous other applications he has developed. For those not lucky enough to be there, here is a brief taste of it: http://t.co/GyCijVunPx Matt Matt, That's great! I'm really looking forward to seeing it in action. Just a question that I'm sure you've addressed somewhere already, but is there any fall-back support to work off USB 2.0? -- Tom Visit us at GRCon13 Oct. 1 - 4 http://www.trondeau.com/grcon13 ___ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] See a demo of our new USRP as DEFCON
Hi Matt, This is very good news. The specs you're anticipating are of great interest to me. Just a further question: Is the B200 conceived in order to support 24/7 continuous operation (e.g. the sort of use case you would expect in a permanent spectrum monitoring application)? If so, have you already or will you have some characterization figures in this regard (an MTBF or the like)? Cheers ...and good luck with your great work Vince Il giorno 02/ago/2013 02:10, Matt Ettus m...@ettus.com ha scritto: For those lucky enough to be going to DEFCON, Balint Seeber (our applications engineer) will be presenting All Your RFz Are Belong to Me -- Hacking the Wireless World with SDR, in Track 4 from 10 AM to 11:45. He will be running all of his demos on the USRP B200, which we are going to release very soon. The low-cost B200 has frequency coverage of 50 MHz to 6 GHz, with 56 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth (at 61.44 MS/s) over a USB 3 interface. The B210 adds 2x2 MIMO capability and a bigger FPGA. The device is bus-powered so there is no need for an external power supply. It *already* runs GNU Radio, OpenBTS, LTE, and anything else that runs on our other USRPs. Balint's talks are always very exciting, so be sure to check it out if you are at the conference. He is going to demonstrate RFID hacking (on FastTrak toll passes), LTE, OpenBTS, and numerous other applications he has developed. For those not lucky enough to be there, here is a brief taste of it: http://t.co/GyCijVunPx Matt ___ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio ___ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
[Discuss-gnuradio] See a demo of our new USRP as DEFCON
For those lucky enough to be going to DEFCON, Balint Seeber (our applications engineer) will be presenting All Your RFz Are Belong to Me -- Hacking the Wireless World with SDR, in Track 4 from 10 AM to 11:45. He will be running all of his demos on the USRP B200, which we are going to release very soon. The low-cost B200 has frequency coverage of 50 MHz to 6 GHz, with 56 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth (at 61.44 MS/s) over a USB 3 interface. The B210 adds 2x2 MIMO capability and a bigger FPGA. The device is bus-powered so there is no need for an external power supply. It *already* runs GNU Radio, OpenBTS, LTE, and anything else that runs on our other USRPs. Balint's talks are always very exciting, so be sure to check it out if you are at the conference. He is going to demonstrate RFID hacking (on FastTrak toll passes), LTE, OpenBTS, and numerous other applications he has developed. For those not lucky enough to be there, here is a brief taste of it: http://t.co/GyCijVunPx Matt ___ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio