Jeff Brower schrieb: > Jordan- > > >>> Phil Karn is a Qualcomm employee -- maybe not the most impartial >>> source. >>> >> Hey, Jeff: welcome to the Internet. I see this must be your first day >> :) >> > > It seems like Phil has worked carefully and thoroughly to show areas of > weakness -- > or unexplained gaps -- in xG's approach and technical data. And he's > qualified to do > so. > > My comment would be that putting a "Snake Oil" image at the top of the web > page is > not a good way to immediately convey a sense of impartiality. > > -Jeff >
I looked at the various posts on this topic and all I can say is... given that I was in Florida a few months ago, working with a 'very low bit rate' link set up over about 15 miles, using a 25 W transmitter in the ISM band (hey it was their FCC problem not mine...), and getting quite a bit of interference none the less... I would have loved to have some snake oil to grease the skids... as long as the customer signed off... As it was, with a few replacements of cables, turning off other 'local' transmitters operating in the same band, etc... all was well.. At 35 or 50 mW of power over 18 miles, in the 902-928 ISM band, and at 3 Mbits/s, I'm wondering where they were in Florida... On the topic of Phil Karn... my 'contact' with that name was using the ancient AX-25/Packet Radio networking stacks of yore to do incredibly low speed networking (as a note my system in Florida was replacing a KA9Q based implementation...). So perhaps while now Karn may have surcome to the corporate coolaid... at least at some point he was involved in the early phases of what we now call 'open software'... like GNURadio.... The last time I had anything to do with Packet Radio was when I ported it to an OS/9 setup for a small company called ITT... I thought that would be my entry in to the big time... ha... well anyway... John Clark. _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio