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Re: [TenTec] [Orion] "Technical Correspondence", August 2007 issue

To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TenTec] [Orion] "Technical Correspondence", August 2007 issue
From: Kevin Purcell <kevinpurcell@pobox.com>
Reply-to: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2007 17:02:24 -0700
List-post: <mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
The question for a company like TenTec is "where is their added-value".

I would think most of their added-value is in their hardware design rather than in their software design (though as the latter is proprietary it's more difficult to see if they're using novel techniques and then protecting them as trade secrets in not revealing the hardware).

If you can share non-value adding (or commodity) software and persuade other people to contribute and maintain or even fork the software then you can make your hardware more valuable. And improve your customers choice and perhaps the availability of less buggy software.

The idea that their hardware is even more valuable when the software is open-sourced has already been seen with other products. For example the Linksys WRT54G hardware that people buy preferentially so they can run another software distribution (dd-wrt, sveasoft, etc) rather than Linksys/Ciscos own software.

It also helps extend the life of products. Like my RX-320 and RX-320D doesn't get much "love" from TT these days but I'm pretty sure that amateurs hacking on their code would like to add more features.

Another question is how would an open source/free software approach affect the design of their hardware. Software development for custom embedded designs in more of a challenge than reusing commodity hardware. Would it make more sense to use commodity miniITX x86 CPUs rather than DSPs in future designs? Again making more of the product from commodity parts especially as a receiver becomes more and more like a computer with an RJ-45 on the back panel rather than a new custom design for each major model.

Of course the idea of "the enemy" "stealing" "your" software may still be in some peoples minds but co-operation can be more effective than competition in some areas. Turing "my" software into "our" software can have interesting effects on both new products and the market.

On Jul 24, 2007, at 3:05 PM, ron wrote:

On Tue, 2007-07-24 at 17:44 -0400, Jeremy Cowgar wrote:
On Tue, Jul 24, 2007 at 01:47:12PM -0700, Kevin Purcell wrote:
I've wondered if TT has considered the open-source route for software
development on their hardware to allow more community participation.
After all do they make money on selling software or hardware?

I've heard discussions on that in the past and I think their fear (wrong
or right) is that they will invest the majority of the time in
developing the software then some other company will come along and use
(or learn) from their code. Therefore, they are educating the enemy.

Who knows if that would play out or not. One thing I do know is that if they were to do that, their radios would become a radio "platform" and I believe their sales would really skyrocket. Imagine having a radio that
you can download different "Operating Systems" to and try out? That
would be one cool system.


you mean, "open source" or "GNU"?? There are codes to adhere to when
using open source, thus no one will do as you suggested.
Look at Linux, look at Ham Radio Deluxe, look at JLog, look at ... you get the idea. I don't think there is a "enemy", only community support.

Ron
"Got Linux??"

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Kevin Purcell
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