On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 11:19:39PM -0400, Tuan (Johnny) Ta wrote: > Very interesting ideas. Thanks Marcus for sharing! Unfortunately I don't have > enough background in compiler to implement such ideas. I'm in the phase of > learning GNU Radio, keeping up with its fast development is already a big task > for me. I'm certainly willing to do something *to* GNU Radio when I'm more > capable and the opportunity presents. But I can definitely see some CS grad > student picking this up. > > My question is more of what I can look at/practice so that I can ask the right > questions at the conference, if my goal is to be familiar enough with GNU > Radio > to implement my own applications/algorithms. Given that there are only 2 weeks > left, I think wandering around might not be a good idea.
Hi everyone, I actually think doing something *with* GNU Radio is the more interesting part, at least at the beginning. How about you start writing a receiver for your favourite comms standard? That way, you can start with a fairly simple environment, use a lot of code templates and concentrate on what you already know. Once you start doing that, you will inevitably end up with something that annoys you, something you feel is inefficient or whatever. Then you've got something to discuss about at the conference :) MB -- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Communications Engineering Lab (CEL) Dipl.-Ing. Martin Braun Research Associate Kaiserstraße 12 Building 05.01 76131 Karlsruhe Phone: +49 721 608-43790 Fax: +49 721 608-46071 www.cel.kit.edu KIT -- University of the State of Baden-Württemberg and National Laboratory of the Helmholtz Association
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