Perhaps someone who has the ear of a major player or two, could suggest open source radios.<br><br>Keep the low level functions in rom for compliance and to prevent damage, but have an open source application layer that we can change however we like. Knobs should be encoders, so that they can be read digitally and used for whatever the application wants.<br><br>As an embedded systems developer, I don't see why this shoul add any cost at all to a modern radio.<br><br><br><span style="font-family:Prelude, Verdana, san-serif;"><br><br></span><span id="signature"><div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;color: #999999;">-- Sent from my Palm Prē</div><br></span><span style="color:navy; font-family:Prelude, Verdana, san-serif; "><hr align="left" style="width:75%">On Jun 10, 2010 7:20, Robert Bruninga <bruninga@usna.edu> wrote: <br><br>> None, but if we keep putting bandages on it rather
<br>> than pushing for the manufacturers to do it right
<br>> we'll keep waiting for a long time.
<br>
<br>Push, push.. Push?
<br>
<br>Its sad that ham radio has devolved to an appliance hobby where
<br>we just sit on our hands and wait for the Japanese to design our
<br>next toy and then have it manufactured in China and shipped to
<br>our waiting hands...
<br>
<br>> It sounds like the Kenwood D710 is half-way there. Let's push
<br>to get
<br>> that last little bit fixed.
<br>
<br>I have been. High on my list of upgrades for the last 2 years
<br>to the D710 has been the INTERRUPT-ALWAYS setting for the
<br>interrupt display. Right now, you can have INTERUUPT-FULL or
<br>INTERRUPT-HALF to set how the information on a new packet will
<br>flash up on the front panel. BUT as I explained, this only
<br>happens once. There is no INTERRUPT ALWAYS.
<br>
<br>If you do not see that one flash, from then on, if that station
<br>is heard later, all you see is "DP CALLSIGN" with no other
<br>clues. Its been that way since 1998 with the D7, and carried
<br>through on the D700 and then the D710.
<br>
<br>No matter how much one would desire to go back and change these
<br>tens of thousands of radios, it is never going to happen. And
<br>so I see no harm in taking matters into our own hands and
<br>*CONTINUING* what we have been doing for 18 years, and that is
<br>using common SSID's where practical.
<br>
<br>If one can change something, do it. If one cannot, then one
<br>should get out of the way so we can do the best with what we
<br>have.
<br>
<br>Bob, WB4APR
<br>
<br>
<br>_______________________________________________
<br>aprssig mailing list
<br>aprssig@tapr.org
<br>https://www.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig
<br></span>