Just go to http://soldersmoke.com. On that archive page, just click on the blue hyperlinks and your audio player should play that episode.
http://soldersmoke.com
Thanks to Bob KD4EBM for alerting us to this. As Bob put it, Shannon definitely had The Knack. Check out the trailer (above) for this new movie. It looks like the IEEE is still working on the release plan for the film. Does anyone have info on this? More info on the film here: https://thebitplayer.com/ Four years ago we reported on a video about Shannon: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2015/09/claude-shannon-had-knack-video.html Thanks Bob!
In SolderSmoke #211 we reported on recent efforts to generate SSB from the QCX CW phasing rig -- we said that we'd heard that the effort wasn't very successful. But today we got an e-mail from Jim W4JED pointing us to YouTube video from Guido PE1NNZ. I must say the signal sounds pretty good to me, and it looks good in the waterfall. Listen for yourselves via the video above. His is the signal on the left. Guido has a great write up, along with software here: https://github.com/threeme3/QCX-SSB I hope this all works out -- it would be great to get on phone with Hans Summers' amazing phasing rig. Here is a picture that hints at the potential:
Pete N6QW had this very interesting video about Software Defined Radio on his blog. Thanks to G3WGV for putting this presentation together. It is very interesting, but -- for me -- it is also troubling. I think something important is being missed in this discussion. You have to listen carefully, but if you do the thing being missed becomes apparent. Like many others, G3WGV asserts that very soon, 100 percent of commercial radios will be SDR. Traditional superhet radios will be a thing of the past. OK, but I will make a parallel assertion: Looking ahead, I think 100 percent of TRULY homebrewed rigs will be HDR. Of course, this really just comes down to how you define "homebrew." I'm a traditionalist here. I think of homebrewing as actually building -- from discrete components -- all the stages that send or receive radio signals. By my definition, I don't think you can really "homebrew" an SDR radio. Taking an ADC chip and connecting it to a computer running SDR software is not -- by my definition -- homebrew. Even if you wrote the software yourself, writing code is not the same as wiring up all the stages that go into a superhet-style transceiver. There were a few lines in G3WGV's talk that seemed to confirm this difference: The SDR radio is defined as a "server." Commercial manufacturers like SDR because they can use the same components that go into cell phones (exactly -- and people will soon have the same relationship with these "radios" that we have with their cell phones). I kind of grimaced when G3WGV described the two sets of users of SDR technology: the "early adopters" who are "technology enthusiasts", and the "pragmatists" who don't care what's in the box -- they just want to talk on it. I think "pragmatist" is a nice way of saying "appliance operator." Even the "early adopters" are pretty far from the world of traditional homebrew. And for me that gets to the point that is being missed in all this -- this shift away from hardware is also a shift away from homebrew. But hey, this is a hobby. To each is own! Have it your way. For myself, I plan to continue with the hardcore, radical fundamentalist, hardware-defined, discrete component, fully analog homebrew radio. This morning I am attempting to stabilize a cap and coil VFO. And I'm liking it. As the world shifts to SDR, I look forward to the appearance on e-Bay of massive quantities of old forsaken HDR rigs. We will buy them for pennies on the dollar and use the parts for new HDR Superhet rigs. Viva E. Howard Armstrong! Viva!
A friend in the UK writes: I'm looking for volumes 2 and 4 of the "The Impoverished Radio Experimenter" pamphlets. I've searched in the UK for them - they are available but at silly money (nigh on £25.00 each). No sign of any pdf downloads, either. pdf downloads (preferred!) or purchasing at £10 and under would do me fine, if you know any sources? Any ideas? Thanks, Bill
27 April 2019 SolderSmoke Podcast #211 is available http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke211.mp3 Pete NOT quitting podcast! Malicious code case RESOLVED! Ambiguity and the Digi-Analog Divide Edwin Howard Armstrong biography SPAACE! Apollo 11 50th Anniversary Oscar 100 in Geostationary Orbit. Why can't we have one too? Farhan puts AISAT in orbit. FB! Space is difficult SSTV from the Space Station Pete's bench report. Vintage Sidebanders Recording of Midwest Vintage SSB "tune up session" Vintage rigs that sound bad Distorted views on "distortion" Bill fixing old Bose Wave Radio NOT GOING TO DAYTON. AGAIN! But SolderSmoke rep will be there 75 meter secrets of success (timing is everything!) MAILBAG Steve N8NM sends me FB National Dial Steve N8NM aspires to complexity -- enough of this simple stuff! Dave W2DAB goes to Columbia U session on Armstrong, sends FB book. Jim W4JED -- reports of QCX sideband a bit exaggerated. Where is Allison? Rob Powell wins beret challenge. VK2TPM and VK2BLQ also win. CONGRATS! Colin G3VMU sends nice 1930s radio picture Alan WA9IRS sends diagram of digi radio signal flow. CLEAR AS MUD! Chris KD4PBJ Grandmother worked at Hammarlund. Steve NU0P sends info on Art Collins and the Apollo moonshots.
Really great to see this session with Nobel Prize winner Joe Taylor, K1JT. I liked his comments on his use of his retirement office at Princeton, University. I also liked his slide on how far below the noise level you can go with various modes. And then there was his reminder to 1) RTFM and 2) be sure to check the EME delay box so that your software will get the timing right when working earth-moon-earth. "Pulsars keep good time."
"SolderSmoke -- Global Adventures in Wireless Electronics" is now available as an e-book for Amazon's Kindle.
Here's the site:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V9FIVW
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