I am running all of that on the Atom 330 (D945GCLF2 mobo) with the addition of Windows XP64 and it is flawless. I had an XP64 disk that has not been installed on a system in two years and it needed an hour to do all of the Windows updates which tells you how old it was. Everything works flawlessly. The big discovery that Intel made with the multiple core technology is that modern operating systems can be single threaded and need a huge clock, gobs of power, and hard to build transmission lines or they can build many slower cores to run in parallel and then have high demand jobs basically get a "CPU to themselves" rather than deal with locks of context switching, etc. and overall, be much better off.

It has absolutely revolutionized the computer industry at the consumer level and has made seriously capable computers dirt cheap.

This is NOT to say this is one size fits all. I am also building an Intel I7 extreme machine where the cost of the motherboard is twice what I paid for the entire Atom 330 computer. It is being built so I can effectively use Nvidia GPU's (I have a two GPU Telsa and will have two more on the graphics card and SLI bound to the Tesla) for DSP supercomputer. This is also not for everyone because it will cost $2500 without the Tesla.

I am extremely happy that Intel brought all of this out and extremely grateful to Phil Covington for suggesting this to Frank and I. I am happy to have had the time to go through all of the necessary pain to get everything going to make it easier for everyone else to follow. I do believe we are approaching, and rapidly, the time when an all SDR setups will be "comodity priced" and "every man" can afford them and have startling capabilities. This is my dream and goal and I thank EVERYONE who follows all of this wandering we do because without the interest and support of this experimenter and user community, we would not make large progress. Whitespace rules and large scale integration and many way SMP cores at reduced power and more will push all of us in this direction whether we want to go there or not. I am happy we are.

73's
Bob


Paul Beckmann wrote:
Just a short status note: The ATOM 330 box is up with GRUB, XPpro32SP3, and Ubuntu 8.10 64-bit. I installed PowerSDR 1.16.1, .NET 1.1, the FA66 drivers, and a 1394 board on the box today and hooked up the SDR-1K. Under 32bit WinXPpro, the CPU meter was running between 10-20%, all modes tried. CW was flawless at 60ms break-in keying delay.

This is a HUGE difference for me in the operation of the SDR-1K. It just shows how SDR really depends on horsepower on the computer side to make it all work. The lock-ups, noise, poor CW performance, pops, etc. were all do to demands exceeding the capability of the old 1.8Ghz P4 system.

Now that I have a functioning SDR station back up, on to playing with Ubuntu, HPSDR, and all the Dttsp goodies!

73 & thanks for all the help!

--Paul, wa0rse

P.S. Eric has told us that PowerSDR will run the 1K and 5K under WinXP-x64 fine, just *not* /Vista64/. I'll likely stay with 32-bit for the time being.
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ARRL SDR Working Group Chair
Member: ARRL, AMSAT, AMSAT-DL, TAPR, Packrats,
NJQRP, QRP ARCI, QCWA, FRC.
“Order and simplification are the first steps
toward the mastery of a subject.”, Mann


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