The OMNI-VII - front panel is ALL digital --- either switches (on / off ) or
digital encoders.... some time in the not too distant future, you'll be able
to buy the nice looking and weighted box with the display and controls you
choose and configure, then connect to your SDR via USB 3.0
The current latency problems with SDR is mostly a function of the attached
computer and its DPCs.... fast computer with fast RAM and low DPCs = low
latency SDR. Flex 6000 series are a different animal with all the needed
computing power of the SDR IN the radio, the attached computer is just the
user interface.
73 & DX,
Gary - AB9M
-----Original Message-----
From: Lee
Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2014 12:06 PM
To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment
Subject: Re: [TenTec] New Radios in the Future
Think you have your finger on it. What would facilitate this even more,
would be if those who designed s_d_r, would adhere to a few common
standards which would make hardware controllers of the type you indicate
portable and interchangeable.
On Oct 31, 2014 4:26 PM, "Rick - DJ0IP / NJ0IP" <Rick@dj0ip.de> wrote:
IMO, the time has come to stop worrying about which "radio".
It's time to abandon the concept of a radio as being the single stand
alone
device that gets us on the air.
SDR radios such as FLEX and ANAN ARE THE FUTURE.
BUT NOT as stand-alone devices.
Most of us will have and use an additional "Human Interface Box".
What most of us don't like about the current SDR radios is their human
interface.
..We want knobs.
..Some of us want big knobs.
..Some of us want more knobs
..Some of us want fewer knobs
The Eagle is a fantastic radio but we can't seem to agree on the knob
arrangement for the perfect Eagle.
WHY MUST WE AGREE ON JUST ONE SOLUTION?
What if we could have a dozen different solutions to the knob arrangement,
but they all control a black box called "Son of Eagle"?
CONSIDER THIS:
In the future there will be multiple companies offering various Human
Interfaces.
Our choice of human interface will be just as important as our choice of
SDR
radio that goes behind it.
Before I continue, let me explain what I have in mind.
I'm thinking of things like the Wood Box interface such as their TMate2.
See: http://www.woodboxradio.com/tmate2.html
My first impression of the TMate2: "Nice but too expensive."
But is it really too expensive?
It is exactly the knobs that this device has which I like so much in my
radios.
Considering its price, the performance of the FLEX 6300 is phenomenal.
But who wants a radio with no knobs? I certainly don't.
In the future, that performance level will be available for $1K or even
less.
Couple that with a $300 human interface and we'll have a lovely radio at a
reasonable price.
Each of us can choose which human interface we want, with as many knobs as
we want, and the radio behind it is a black box engine. We can swap the
SDR
black box engine as often as we want, but keeping our own favorite human
interface. Each new radio will have the same look and feel as the old
one.
No new steep learning curve.
Upgrading to newer technology will be cheaper because we don't replace
everything.
We just purchase a new engine.
I believe this will be the ham radio of the future.
This approach will enable each of us to create a radio environment that
suits our own personal tastes.
Even though I was one of the ones yelling loudest that real radios have
knobs, I'm ready to jump ship as soon as they build solutions like this.
73 - Rick, DJ0IP
(Nr. Frankfurt am Main)
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