[Ground-station] Open Research Institute DEFCON 27 Financial Report + next steps

KC9SGV kc9sgv at gmail.com
Sun Aug 18 08:54:22 PDT 2019


Hi Michelle and All,

Glad to see that the IRB concept to work QO-100 was finally utilized to wet our appetite for ham GEO satellite operations in Region 2.

See my old proposal for an IRB (Internet Remote Base) in the AMSAT-DL forum here...
The thread was locked after it got too heated 🤔
https://forum.amsat-dl.org/index.php?thread/202-proposal-for-an-internet-remote-base-station-irb-in-the-footprint-of-qo-100/

Bernard,
KC9SGV

Sent from my iPad

> On Aug 17, 2019, at 7:27 PM, Michelle Thompson via Ground-Station <ground-station at lists.openresearch.institute> wrote:
> 
> Thank you to Paul KB5MU for preparing this report! 
> 
> Here's the rundown on how we did fundraising at DEFCON 27. 
> 
> In short, very well. We are now sold out of Trans-Ionospherics and we received other donations as well.
> 
> How much do we have, today, in the bank? $9,910.28
> 
> What will we use it for? 
> 
> Well, that's 0.2% of what we need for four 6U GEO spacecraft and four spares to put our open source broadband microwave amateur payloads into orbit. 
> 
> However, it's more than enough to support any ground station development to serve the FDMA up and TDM down system that these spacecraft (along with the Virginia Tech 4B payload) are designed to support. As previously reported, due to an additional donation, we have been able to purchase 10 sets of ICEbreaker FPGA kits for an amateur radio satellite digital communications class in the fall of 2019. Our goal here is to build the technical corps of amateur radio in the areas of FPGA design. 
> 
> Thank you to Paul KB5MU, Michael KK6OOZ, and Rose (TBD) for their assistance at the ORI booth at DC27. 
> 
> -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- More Longer Stuff
> 
> In addition to fundraising at our "Tonight's the Night Volcano" booth, we demonstrated the channelizer from Theseus Cores. Recent work has dramatically improved stability and performance. There were no time outs or other glitches over the entire weekend. We used it on the FM broadcast band and also got it working at 5GHz. There was some confusion here about how to configure the radio source in RFNoC for multiple antennas, but we figured it out.
> 
> We talked about Open Research Institute, GNU Radio, GNU Radio Conference, Libre Space, SatNOGs, and the many other open source groups and digital technologies that are of interest to amateur radio. 
> 
> We were very busy Friday - Sunday. This was the first year for the Ham Radio Village, and it was a rousing success. Planning has already begun for next year!
> 
> The audience was young, enthusiastic, well-informed, and more diverse than most amateur radio conferences. Nearly 130 people were licensed at the license test session in the village, over 27,000 people attended the conference, and like most big events, there was way more to do than one can manage to absorb. One of the big highlights of the Ham Radio Village was a live demo of QO-100 through a remote station by John GI7UGV. A foxhunting event was hosted from the Village along with WSPR station, advanced APRS demo station, constant churn of show and tell, and an excellent talk from Smitty Halibut about direction antennas, direction finding, and the electronics techniques required to succeed in ARDF. 
> 
> More soon,
> -Michelle W5NYV
> 
> 




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