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Thread: Open Source D* replacement

  1. #1
    Orca Whisperer
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    Open Source D* replacement

    And, it's completely open source: http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?p=3125

    David Rowe is also the one who brought us Codec2 with his hard work alongside Bruce Perens (Who is also a maintainer for the Debian Linux distro). I am SO going to jump on one as soon as they are ready to ship!
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  2. #2
    Administrator N8YX's Avatar
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    Count me in on this if we can get enough area system support.
    "Everyone wants to be an AM Gangsta until it's time to start doing AM Gangsta shit."

  3. #3
    La Rata Del Desierto K7SGJ's Avatar
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    Looks very interesting. I'll be curious to see how well it's received in the field. Thanks for the find.
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  4. #4
    Tribal Warrior KC9SQR's Avatar
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    I've been following these guys for a while and watching the progress of FreeDV and I've been very impressed... I honestly think this is EXACTLY what is needed for this to take off in amateur radio.. Or really DV in general because it adapts to existing equipment instead of needing an entirely separate radio..
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by KC9SQR View Post
    I've been following these guys for a while and watching the progress of FreeDV and I've been very impressed... I honestly think this is EXACTLY what is needed for this to take off in amateur radio.. Or really DV in general because it adapts to existing equipment instead of needing an entirely separate radio..
    Exactly, and this is what the D* fanatics can't seem to get into their heads: Requiring a hardware chip isn't the answer, especially one that is single-sourced.
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  6. #6
    Conch Master W2NAP's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by KC2UGV View Post
    Exactly, and this is what the D* fanatics can't seem to get into their heads: Requiring a hardware chip isn't the answer, especially one that is single-sourced.
    A+

    Quite frank if I am going to have to buy a "new" rig to do some digital, forget icom ill go mototrbo
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  7. #7
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    There was an announcement prior to Hamvention that there would be a group presenting there that has reverse engineered the AMBE vocoder, opening the possibility that you could have a radio that would do mutliple DV modes - DSTAR, P25, and FreeDV, and potentially others. I think this is what is really needed - instead of trying to clobber one established faction with another protocol - the Japanese business model - you make it possible for everyone to play everywhere.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by K0RGR View Post
    There was an announcement prior to Hamvention that there would be a group presenting there that has reverse engineered the AMBE vocoder, opening the possibility that you could have a radio that would do mutliple DV modes - DSTAR, P25, and FreeDV, and potentially others. I think this is what is really needed - instead of trying to clobber one established faction with another protocol - the Japanese business model - you make it possible for everyone to play everywhere.
    The problem with that is once you reverse engineer a patented item, you open yourself up to lawsuits. So, the unencumbered route is the way that was picked for FreeDV.
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  9. #9
    Beach Bum
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    I think we will quickly see ourselves in a similar debate to VHS vs BETA and BluRay VS HDDVD. I think Icom will wind up being the Sony of the radio world since they have sunk millions into this on a bet.

    Icom should have been careful choosing a licensed codec, and then leading thousands of (richer than me) hams into buying all those handhelds and mobile radios when the majority of digital voice users wind up on a free and open sourced codec.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by AE5CP View Post
    I think we will quickly see ourselves in a similar debate to VHS vs BETA and BluRay VS HDDVD. I think Icom will wind up being the Sony of the radio world since they have sunk millions into this on a bet.

    Icom should have been careful choosing a licensed codec, and then leading thousands of (richer than me) hams into buying all those handhelds and mobile radios when the majority of digital voice users wind up on a free and open sourced codec.
    Well, the good news in all of this, is the D* radios will be able to do both D* and FreeDV with this mic...
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