BeagleBrick

Self Contained SDR Ham Radio Station featuring an LCD touch screen and TI's BeagleBoard - Why Bark When You Can Byte?

Posted by Angel on 2009-12-31T17:16:52-05:00

Dubbed
“The iPad for Hams”
at the 2010 HamVention, this completely self-contained SDR Ham Radio Station features the Beagleboard in conjunction with an array of inexpensive QRP transceiver kits. To date several popular DSP and Software Defined Radio programs such as FLDigi and Hamlib have been ported to Angstrom Linux for use on the BeagleBoard.

BeagleBrick Manifesto

Communication is at the core of everything we do. In this world, without communication all other global processes and human interactions eventually grind to a halt. In disasters, natural or man made when communications systems fail, chaos ensues quickly shutting down all possible coordination of aid and support efforts no matter how well planned or organized. Without communications nothing works. Enter the BeagleBrick.

The BeagleBrick combines the latest “software defined radio” technology with a globally established, century old, field tested communications network – ham radio – to provide a highly robust, portable and reliable emergency communications solution in one 4″ x 8″ “brick”.

The BeagleBrick offers the best of both worlds – small radio, small operating footprint – by incorporating Texas Instruments’ powerhouse OMAP3-based chipset offered to engineers, educators and scientists in the form of the BeagleBoard. Running at 600 mHz, the BeagleBoard boasts an entire Linux workstation with DVI video and chip level accelerated graphics and the capability of hosting Wifi and Bluetooth remote control.

The result is an entire operations center capable of running a vast array of software and, since it’s Linux, even act an an emergency web server! Connect several BeagleBricks and you have a network. Add Wifi or Bluetooth and you don’t even need wires! APRS? WSPR? Repeater?

Get it!

Of course the BeagleBrick is still in development but you can still experience most of the functional advantages of the system by running it in “guts on the table mode” with various peripherals as outlined in Rob’s slides which can be found at:: http://www.rarcpio.net/beaglebrick/main.html

Rob’s BBImage containing all the software as well as instructions for loading onto an SD card for the Beaglebrick is available for free download at:: http://www.rarcpio.net/beaglebrick/downloads/

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