On 11/28/2010 01:27 AM, Sanjay Singh wrote:
> Hi Eric,
>
> Is daughterboard ID burning inot EEPROM for WBX_NG supported in
> gnuradio-3.3.0 ?.
>
> Am unable to burn daughter board EEPROM for wbx_ng.
>
> When i run ./burn-db-eeprom -A -f -t 'wbx_ng', i get error as 'name
> error'.
>
> Am using USRP1
On 11/27/2010 11:55 PM, Eric Blossom wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 11:16:24PM -0600, Brett L. Trotter wrote:
>
>> On an up to date fedora 13 x86_64
>>
>> I just did this:
>> 624 git clone http://gnuradio.org/git/gnuradio.git
>> 625 cd gnuradio
>> 626 git branch --track next origin/ne
On 11/27/2010 11:02 PM, Steve Mcmahon wrote:
> Hello:
>
> What is the maximum recommended input signal power for the WBX daughterboard?
> Where can I find this in the documentation or online at Ettus.com? My
> understanding is that the LNA is very sensitive and it is easy to overload it
> and da
Hi Eric,
Is daughterboard ID burning inot EEPROM for WBX_NG supported in
gnuradio-3.3.0 ?.
Am unable to burn daughter board EEPROM for wbx_ng.
When i run ./burn-db-eeprom -A -f -t 'wbx_ng', i get error as 'name error'.
Am using USRP1 mother board.
Regards
Sanjay
___
On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 11:16:24PM -0600, Brett L. Trotter wrote:
> On an up to date fedora 13 x86_64
>
> I just did this:
> 624 git clone http://gnuradio.org/git/gnuradio.git
> 625 cd gnuradio
> 626 git branch --track next origin/next
> 627 git checkout next
> 628 ./bootstrap
> 6
On an up to date fedora 13 x86_64
I just did this:
624 git clone http://gnuradio.org/git/gnuradio.git
625 cd gnuradio
626 git branch --track next origin/next
627 git checkout next
628 ./bootstrap
629 ./configure --enable-docs --enable-grc --enable-gnuradio-examples
--enable-gr-ut
Hello:
What is the maximum recommended input signal power for the WBX daughterboard?
Where can I find this in the documentation or online at Ettus.com? My
understanding is that the LNA is very sensitive and it is easy to overload it
and damage it. I thought it was 0 dBm, but I have seen several
I'll take a look at the OOP chapter. I was playing with Objective C for a
while so have a little of OOP figured out, but just the basics. The USRP2
is a nice piece of hardware. There is a danger, on the WBX, of the LNA
blowing out the second stage amp if greater than -10 dBm is applied (and the
Hello, Madengr!
First, you made an excellent investment! The USRP2 is a very powerful
peripheral to get introduced to the SDR world.
By the way, I want to write a little documentation about his
architecture (explaining what's implemented in the FPGA, how it
communicates to the host and etc.) Ther
Steve,
I didn't mean to accuse you or Adi or anyone of intending to violate
copyright, and I apologize for giving that impression. The Wyglinski
et al. and Rondeau/Bostian books have apparently been uploaded as pdfs
to downarchive.com, and that does strike me as a flagrant violation of
copyright,
John:
No one is trying to violate copyright here (at least I am not). I think people
are just trying to obtain good resources. I don't understand why McGraw Hill
would announce but then never publish Cory Clark's book. I assume the book was
completely written, but then they didn't want to publis
Hi,
Does this happen to anyone using BBN code (USRP2 version) with
gnuradio-3.3.0, that only when I set the decimation factor to 4, I see the
most of the beacon messages sent from the APs around the lab at 1Mbps
captured, otherwise, I hardly see half of the beacons sent (I compare the
capture wit
I am not a lawyer, but that looks to me like a very clear violation
of copyright, and I want no part of it. Buy the books if you're going
to use them. The authors deserve to be paid for their work. You can
always return the books if they're really not useful.
John
On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 5:37 PM
Both books are available through http://www.downarchive.com
Search for the names, it will take you to links where you can download them.
Try before you buy :)
Adi
On 27/11/2010 22:13, John McKendry wrote:
The Cory Clark book was announced but never published - Amazon's "out
of print" designa
The Cory Clark book was announced but never published - Amazon's "out
of print" designation is kind of misleading on that score. I know of
two books that specifically address GNU Radio and the USRP:
"Artificial Intelligence in Wireless Communications" by Tom Rondeau
and Charles Bostian,
http://www
On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 10:28 PM, Steve Mcmahon
wrote:
> I'm looking for a book on GNU Radio,
> and the only thing that I can find is this book:
>
> http://www.amazon.com/Software-Defined-Radio-GNU-USRP/dp/0071498834
>
> However, it is out of print. Does anyone know how I might be able to obtain
>
I'm looking for a book on GNU Radio,
and the only thing that I can find is this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Software-Defined-Radio-GNU-USRP/dp/0071498834
However, it is out of print. Does anyone know how I might be able to obtain a
paper or PDF copy of the book? Does anyone have a used copy for
> > 3) I saw there was an actual gnuradio book, but looks
> like it was never
> > published. I'd be willing to buy this in PDF or
> ebook format; is it
> > avaiable?
Is this the book you're talking about?
Let me know if you can find a copy.
I would definitely buy it if I could find it.
http://ww
On Sat, 2010-11-27 at 20:19 +, Abdalaleem Andy James Potter wrote:
> Dear All,
>
>
> What would be the best way of working with the Ka-band using the USRP?
Ka-band low-noise block downconverters (LNB) and block upconverters
(BUC) are available from several manufacturers. Most of these conver
Dear All,
What would be the best way of working with the Ka-band using the USRP?
Could existing boards be used with some modifications to access 50Mhz
of bandwidth in the Ka-band?
Andrew___
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On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 4:02 PM, madengr wrote:
>
> I finally purchased a USRP2. I have many years of RF/Microwave hardware
> experience but totally new to Python programming, not to mention C++. I
> know some C for microcontrollers, a little Verilog on Xilinx hardware, and
> some DSP theory. I
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