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Tech Head - The Technology Section
SDR radio, Software Defined Radio
New sdr computer.
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<blockquote data-quote="RustySpoons" data-source="post: 1050961" data-attributes="member: 412012"><p>You have a lovely ITX board there, you could have utilised that in a really nice small case that would have fitted everything in for very little money.</p><p>Just snip the legs on the LED's and pull them out and any wiring thats not needed. Unless you have spare fans.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Depends on the SDR Client software, not all will use the GPU for number crunching, SDR Console will use nVidia Cuda cores though, mainly CPU is most important. And that depends on what the bandwith is on the SDR device. If it's a RTL type SDR then a potato is powerful enough to resolve its I/Q data. If its something with higher bandwith and you are using various software then you need something powerful. But Powerful can be a gen 1 i5/i7. Even the old Gen 1 i7 2600K is Mega Powerful.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RustySpoons, post: 1050961, member: 412012"] You have a lovely ITX board there, you could have utilised that in a really nice small case that would have fitted everything in for very little money. Just snip the legs on the LED's and pull them out and any wiring thats not needed. Unless you have spare fans. Depends on the SDR Client software, not all will use the GPU for number crunching, SDR Console will use nVidia Cuda cores though, mainly CPU is most important. And that depends on what the bandwith is on the SDR device. If it's a RTL type SDR then a potato is powerful enough to resolve its I/Q data. If its something with higher bandwith and you are using various software then you need something powerful. But Powerful can be a gen 1 i5/i7. Even the old Gen 1 i7 2600K is Mega Powerful. [/QUOTE]
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New sdr computer.
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