On 11/29/2010 03:24 AM, Martin Braun wrote: > > FWIW, a lot of people think GNU Radio is hard. Personally, I find the > hardest bit is understanding signal processing. And no tool in the world > can make that simple. If you really know how the DSP works, getting GNU > Radio to do thy biddings is usually fairly straightforward. > > Good luck! > MB > > My experience, on this list and elsewhere is that there's a perception that SDR environments will allow you to build a software-based radio with only the very thinnest (or non-existent) understanding of:
o programming (whether it's Python or C++ or whatever) o real-time systems o RF systems in the analog world o signal processing I think a significant number of people get into Gnu Radio having come from perhaps an intro course in signal processing perhaps using Matlab or similar, and expect GnuRadio to be a pretty-similar experience, only with real hardware "on the ends". They get "bitten" by the fact that at the end of the day, your signal has to interact with the real analog world, and they have no experience to offer guidance once the "rubber hits the road". Simple lab-practice concepts like the use of attenuators between a transmitter and a receiver when you're hard-wiring them, is not something that the purely Matlab-like world prepares you for. When you think of a radio *purely* as a set of abstract mathematical operations, you can often lose sight of the fact that there's this ugly physical universe out there as well, and many folks encountering Gnu Radio for the first time are also encountering a lot of different "ugly realities" for the first time as well. My ten cents worth... -- Principal Investigator Shirleys Bay Radio Astronomy Consortium http://www.sbrac.org _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio