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Alex Akselrod
Alex Akselrod boosted
No Starch Press
@nostarch@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp last month

Software-defined radio (SDR) transforms how we study and experiment with wireless communication.

By processing real signals on your computer, you’ll explore modulation, filtering, and receiver design—skills that extend into modern systems like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular.

Whether you’re an engineer or an enthusiast, SDR offers a practical way to understand the building blocks of today’s wireless world.

https://nostarch.com/practical-sdr

#sdr #wireless #gnu #bluetooth #cellular

A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
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No Starch Press
@nostarch@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp last month

Software-defined radio (SDR) transforms how we study and experiment with wireless communication.

By processing real signals on your computer, you’ll explore modulation, filtering, and receiver design—skills that extend into modern systems like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular.

Whether you’re an engineer or an enthusiast, SDR offers a practical way to understand the building blocks of today’s wireless world.

https://nostarch.com/practical-sdr

#sdr #wireless #gnu #bluetooth #cellular

A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
A graphic with the book cover of “Practical SDR: Getting Started with Software-Defined Radio” by David Clark and Paul Clark at the center. The cover shows a humanoid robot sitting on the floor with headphones on, connected by cable to a large vintage radio. Behind the radio is a window with curtains. The background is yellow and beige. At the top of the graphic is the text “Decode the Invisible World Around You.” At the bottom is the text “Explore the signals behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular—starting with SDR fundamentals.”
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Chuck Mattern
@chuckmattern@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp last month

I've been hands on about everything for as long as I can remember and personally run GrapheneOS but for some folks that still seems a bridge too far. Perhaps this is a good option for them. Anyone out there using UP Phone?

https://www.morningstar.com/news/pr-newswire/20250812la48867/unplugged-relaunches-up-phone-under-new-ceo-with-a-powerful-privacy-system-and-all-new-experience

#privacy #security #cellular

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