radiated noise).
B&B Electronics has them:
http://www.bb-elec.com/product_family.asp?FamilyId=148
If you do get one, make sure it supports USB 2.0 ... many do not.
--Jim Morash
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Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org
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Jim Morash wrote:
How many MFLOPS does your DSP solution currently require? You mention
a floating-point DSP; is it the Texas Inst
C6713? If so is it running 300 MHz / 1200 MFLOPS?
Yes, that's right. I do fear we are using it rather inefficiently, though.
To clarify: we are runnin
How many MFLOPS does your DSP solution currently require? You mention a
floating-point DSP; is it the Texas Inst
C6713? If so is it running 300 MHz / 1200 MFLOPS?
Yes, that's right. I do fear we are using it rather inefficiently, though.
___
Dis
1 (for size/power
reasons); it seems fairly fast and has a nice built in audio codec with
a high sampling rate.
http://www.engadget.com/2007/06/03/via-epia-px1-pico-itx-motherboard-gets-reviewed/
I am fairly new to software-defined radio in general. Thanks in advance
for any suggestio