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From YouTube: ORI FPGA Meetup 11 April 2023
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A
A
Hello,
everyone
welcome
to
fpga's
Stand-Up
meeting
for
open
Research
Institute
for
April
11th
of
2023..
What
we
do
here
is
we
talk
about
what
we've
done
over
the
past
week,
what
we're
going
to
do
over
the
next
week
and
if
we
need
any
resources
for
our
work
and
if
we
have
any
roadblocks-
and
we
have
plenty
to
share,
because
our
class
with
MathWorks
for
HDL,
coder
and
and
fpga
work
with
respect
to
software-defined
radio
is
not
live
and
looks
like
we're
well
on
our
way
to
being
able
to
have
a
successful
class
okay.
A
B
Everyone
I'm
James
Keel
Juliet,
7
kilo,
Delta
Echo,
I'm,
A,
lab
technician
at
room
at
lab
South
for
Ori,
not
too
much
to
report
in
we've,
been
organizing
some
of
our
boxes
and
some
of
our
equipment
to
get
things
more
properly
set
up,
but
other
than
that.
There's
not
too
much
to
report
this
past
week,
so
we're
otherwise
doing
well.
Okay,.
A
C
Hello
I'm
Paul
kb5mu
at
remote,
lab
West,
we
have
a
new
radio
install
the
adrv
9002
is
physically
installed.
It's
I
made
up
aluminum
plate
screwed
down
the
fpga
platform
to
it,
and
the
radio
so
they're
mechanically
stable,
now
not
yet
been
turned
on.
We
need
to
do
some
more
work
to
figure
out
exactly
what's
necessary
to
to
convert
the
software
over
to
work
with
this
platform.
So
that's
coming
soon.
I've
done
some
work
in
I.
A
Can
help
a
little
bit
there,
because
the
7
A.M
meeting
with
Leonard
we
we
talked
about
this
exact
issue,
so
Leonard
is
going
to
look
at
the
pin
outs
between
the
zcu
106
and
the
adrb
9002
to
make
absolutely
sure
that
there
isn't
any
incompatibility,
because,
as
we've
discussed
before
the
zcu
102,
the
first
board
in
this
particular
family
that
we
have.
A
We
have
the
the
one
of
the
more
advanced
ones
that
the
zcu
102
is
supported
explicitly
by
Analog
Devices
and
the
106
is
not
but
there's
an
awful
lot
of
people
using
our
combination,
since
it's
the
most
capable
sets
of
boards
in
the
family.
A
So
so
Leonard
is
going
to
look
at
the
schematics
for
me
and
tell
and
then
come
back
to
me
and
tell
me
if
that
it's
okay
and
then
my
job
is
to
is
to
make
sure
to
go,
to
go
ahead
and
check
out
the
rest
of
it
in
terms
of
tickle
files.
To
get
this
up
and
running
in
the
lab,
like,
like
all
of
the
other
teams
out
there
in
the
world,
have
been
able
to
do
so.
A
I,
just
I
just
wanted
to
interject
to
say
that
we're
we're
working
on
this
and-
and
we
had
a
meeting
earlier-
expressly
devoted
to
this
particular
issue.
C
Very
good
thanks
for
the
work
on
that
I
looked
briefly
at
the
engineer,
Zone
that
Analog
Devices
run
their
forum
for
for
supporting
this
stuff
and
didn't
find
anything
in
the
way.
It
super
explicit
instructions
and
how
to
do
that.
So
somebody
already
knows:
what's
going
on
between
the
two
of
you
to
be
able
to
figure
it
out
and
they'll,
be
able
to
turn
it
on
and
make
it
available
to.
Everybody
there's
also
been
some
work
on
opulent
voice,
but
nothing
directly.
C
Fpga
related
come
got
past
a
roadblock
on
that,
thanks
to
a
lot
of
very
important
help
from
Michelle
we're
now
able
to
actually
detect
sync
words
reliably,
because
there
were
some.
There
was
a
filters
that
needed
adjusting
it.
I
wasn't
aware
of
didn't
know
how
to
adjust,
and
now
we
now
we
do
know
and
we've
adjusted
it
so
adding
some
more
of
the
protocol
layers
in
there
to
be
able
to
push
Voice
through
again,
as
we
did
before.
C
A
All
right,
thank
you
and
work
continues
on
the
Uplink.
We
made
some
big
steps
forward
that
are
in
the
repo
already.
So,
if
you're
on
slack-
and
you
can
see
all
the
GitHub
Ops
updates,
then
you
can
look
at
the
check-ins
and
and
review
the
work.
So
so.
Thank
you
very
much.
Paul
from
from
remote
Labs
West
things
are
things
are
working
pretty
well
all
right,
so
go
ahead.
Sasha
do
you
have
any
anything
you
need
or
any
reports
to
make.
D
No
honestly,
life
has
been
very,
very
busy
for
me,
so
I
I
don't
have
much
to
report.
I
did
sign
up
for
the
class,
so
I'm
actually
very
much
looking
forward
to.
A
Yeah
yeah
our
classes
come
together.
All
of
the
negotiations
and
work
with
MathWorks
has
paid
off.
We've
got
a
class
that
focuses
on
digital
Communications
and
software
defined
radio
and
getting
the
most
out
of
xilinx
and
Analog
Devices
chips
with
the
workflow
that
both
of
these
companies
prioritize
and
the
goal
here
is
to
produce
good,
solid,
open
source
work,
and
that
happens
with
the
particular
toolbox
that
we're
going
to
use
in
the
class.
A
So
the
class
will
be
held
from
the
first
through
the
5th
of
May
2023
and
will
be
online
and
there
are
subsidies
available
for
people
that
cannot
afford
the
the
price
of
the
class.
We
are
super
happy
about
this.
E
A
I'll
put
the
links
in
the
show
notes
for
this
particular
recording,
so
you
can
get
to
it.
We're
hoping
that
it
that
will
by
the
time
you
see
this,
we
probably
will
have
filled
it
up.
But
if
it
goes
well-
and
this
response
is
strong,
then
we'll
do
it
again
and
take
all
the
feedback
that
we
hopefully
will
get
from
the
participants
and
make
it
even
better.
A
Other
things
going
on
here
this
week
are
their
newsletter
for
April,
is
now
out,
send
it
out
to
the
mailing
list
and
or
to
the
list
for
the
newsletter
to
also
to
our
mailing
list
for
Ori,
the
links
will
be
posted
on
our
slack
and
all
throughout
social
media.
I've,
taken
a
tour
through
a
variety
of
technical
Discord
servers
and
posted
the
content.
A
So
there's
two
things:
the
class
from
MathWorks,
where,
where
we
get
some
training
that
we've
been
after
for
a
while
and
has
been
delayed
by
covid,
is
going
to
happen
and
will
help
us
with
the
things
that
we
want
to
do
with
difficult
digital
Communications
systems
and
also
the
guest
editor
for
our
newsletter
is
Dr
Daniel
estefas
and
if
you're,
if
you're
not
familiar
with
this
work,
then
his
blog
is
an
amazing
resource.
A
So
a
strong,
open,
source,
proponent
and
he's
been
been
very
generous
with
his
time
and
has
written
a
a
detailed
walkthrough
of
how
he
used
the
open
source
tool
amaranth.
This
is
a
sort
of
a
python-centric
framework
that
lets
you
take
code
from
python
into
HDL
and
he
explains
how
he
used
it
to
create
the
Maya
SDR
Maya
SDR
is
the
Spectrum
analyzer
that
runs
entirely
within
the
fpga
on
a
Pluto
SDR
for
Analog
Devices,
the
Pluto
SDR,
the
central
sort
of
a
chip.
A
There
is
the
9361
from
Analog
Devices
and
the
fpga
on
there
I
believe
is
this
70
10
or
70
20..
So
this
is
a
really
cool
article.
It's
it's
in
our
newsletter
and
I'll
out.
A
The
link
will
also
be
in
the
show
notes
for
this
particular
recording,
so
there
there's
lots
of
things
going
on
with
fpgas,
so
if
you're
kind
of
wondering
why
we
would
have
a
class
about
HDL,
coder
or
proprietary
toolbox
from
MathWorks,
and
also
publish
a
substantial
article
about
amaranth
I'll,
explain
what
we're
after
is
to
know
how
this
work
is
done,
both
in
the
proprietary
and
Commercial
world
and
in
open
source,
so
that
we
can
better
inform
open
source
tools
about
what
they're
up
against
about
what
their
competition
is.
A
And,
furthermore,
whatever
the
right
tool
for
the
job
is
that's
what
we
use,
because
the
focus
of
our
work
is
the
outcome
the
published
work,
so
whatever
tool
is
best
for
the
job.
That's
what
we
need
to
use,
because
the
end
goal
is
to
produce
solid,
open
source
work
that
is
useful
in
a
broad
variety
of
platforms
and
HDL
coder
from
from
Matlab
or
MathWorks
produces
vendor
independent
code.
Human
readable,
it's
high
quality
and
I
suspect
that
the
open
source
Community
can
also
achieve
this
goal.
A
And
if
you
read
the
article
from
Dr
estepas
I,
can
you
can
see
what
amaranth
in
particular
will
provide
you?
So
that's
our
goal,
as
the
non-profit
organization
is
to
do
this
sort
of
r
d
in
these
sorts
of
fair
comparisons
and
and
be
unblinking
about
it
and
to
just
go
ahead
and
do
the
work
and
to
get
our
hands
dirty
to
be
able
to
make
legitimate
and
authentic
comparisons.
A
Okay,
so
plenty
more
about
the
class,
it's
useful,
because
it
has
two
solid
days
of
very
wonderful
Theory,
so
you'll
learn
about
cortic,
you'll,
learn
about
multi-phase,
polyphase
filters
and
polyphase
techniques
and
all
sorts
of
things.
The
trickery
is
in
the
math
fixed,
Point
versus
floating
Point,
all
sorts
of
stuff
about
specific
to
software-defined
radio,
and
then
the
the
last
two
days
of
the
class
are
actually
implementing
a
transceiver
on
a
9361
from
Analog
Devices.
This
is
a
remote
class.
A
So
if
you
can
handle
the
time
zone
which
is
U.S
Pacific,
then
you
can
take
it
and
you
can
take
it
heavily.
Subsidized
I,
don't
think.
There's
ever
been
a
situation
where
a
MathWorks
class
like
this
has
ever
been
offered
for
a
hundred
dollars,
but
we
are,
and
as
soon
as
it
fills
up,
then
we'll
move
forward
and
if
you
go
ahead
and
say
that
you're
interested,
then
maybe
we'll
do
this
again
and
and
subsidize
the
classes
for
people
in
the
open
source
community.
A
So
we
are
devoted
towards
this,
and
this
is
what
we're
here
for
very,
very
much
looking
forward
to
taking
the
class
and
to
to
being
able
to
help
people
get
get
ready
for
it.
A
If
you
need
a
refresher
course
in
Matlab
or
simulink,
just
the
mechanics
of
Matlab
or
simulink,
then
there's
a
ton
of
free
and
really
good
resources
from
from
Matlab
we've
put
them
into
the
registration
form
so
that
you
can
get
to
them
and
if
you're,
if
you're
short
on
the
DSP
side,
a
digital
signal
processing
side,
if
you,
if
you
need
to
kind
of
get
up
to
speed
on
that,
then
get
in
touch
and
we'll
see
what
we
can
do,
because
we
have
about
a
month
and
there's
a
lot.
A
That
can
happen
if
you,
if
you
want
to
close
the
gap.
So
thank
you
to
everyone.
That's
made
this
possible.
We
hope
to
keep
doing
this
in
the
future
and
we're
we're
looking
for
anyone
that
wants
to
help
defray
the
costs.
We
are
we're
going
to
be
I.
A
Think
it's
fair
to
say
that
we'll
be
doing
this
at
a
loss,
but
it's
worth
it
and
we
already
have
some
some
contributions,
some
donations
that
will
put
it
back
more
towards
you
know
even
even
money,
but
if
this
is
the
sort
of
thing
that
you
want
to
see
in
amateur
radio
and
an
open
source
community,
and
all
of
these
things
will
definitely
help
all
the
different
companies
out
there.
That
are
that
are
trying
to
do
this
work.
A
Having
having
a
more
vibrant
and
healthy,
open
source
code
base
in
Advanced,
Digital
Communications
actually
does
help
all
sorts
of
efforts,
including
including
commercial
ones.
The
rising
tide
lifts
all
boats.
So
if
you
can
pay
it
pay
it
back
or
invest
in
this,
then
we're
we're
willing
to
to
listen
to
you
and
to
to
do
what
we
can
to
meet
any
needs
that
we
don't
see.
E
Yeah
I'm,
just
listening,
is,
as
always,
I
have
nothing
to
contribute.
Today,
hopefully,
you
got
my
email
about
Doug
Casper.
A
Yes,
I
did.
Thank
you
very
much
all
right.
Thanks
everybody.
We
have
lots
more
going
on
with
a
variety
of
different
projects
and
I
think
we'll
we'll
go
ahead
and
shut
down
the
the
fpga
and
remote
Labs
part
and
we'll
move
into
office
hours
if
you're.
If
you're
listening
to
this-
and
you
would
like
to
learn
more
about
what
we
do,
then
please
go
to
open
research,
dot,
Institute
click
on
getting
started
and
get
in
touch
and
we'll
be
happy
to
help
meet
you
wherever
you're
at
and
to
see
you
achieve
your
goals.