EtherHam

Amateur Radio Over Internet

Random Wire Review 75: February 3, 2024

Interesting items in my feeds this week plus getting started with a Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard

In this issue

  • Interesting items this week

    • New Packet Radio

    • Single Board Computers

    • Headset Hacks

    • Amateur Radio on the Moon

    • EOC almost in my backyard

    • Tailscale deep dive

    • Thank you Steve Stroh

    • Thank you David Gleason

  • Project: Raspberry Pi 400 Keyboard

    • Unboxing

    • Installing the operating system


Interesting items this week

New Packet Radio

Have you heard of New Packet Radio? Think of it as IP connections over 430 MHz radio. The Zero Retries newsletter has some interesting information on it this week, suggesting it is primed to take off “if the FCC updates its Amateur Radio regulations by removing symbol rate and bandwidth limitations, NPR could then be used in the US at its maximum data rate of 1 Mbps using a 1 MHz channel.”

Zero Retries
Zero Retries 0137
Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1200+ subscribers…
Read more

Fast packet data over RF would be a very interesting development, indeed!

Single Board Computers

I am finding that I like playing with single board computers (SBCs), and I’ve tried several different brands and generations. A very interesting board is the Banana Pi BPI-M7 because it supports adding NVMe storage and has two network interface ports. I’m looking forward to watching this project mature. Click here to learn more.

Another interesting SBC is the Solitude by Libre Computer:

The Libre Computer Solitude is a Raspberry Pi lookalike that’s powered by an Amlogic S905XD3 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor with Mali-G31 MP2 graphics and a 1.2 TOPS AI accelerator.

The GPIO layout is compatible with the Raspberry Pi 4 layout, suggesting that peripherals/hats designed for the RPi 4 might work with this SBC. Additional storage is supported through an eMMC port. My only misgiving is I’ve worked with a couple of Libre Computer boards and had a lot of trouble with the eMMC boards. I hope the Solitude is more forgiving than the earlier boards I worked with. Click here to learn more.

Headset Hacks

Many of us in the ham radio world are hackers at heart. Sometimes nothing is quite as enjoyable as taking apart a device to see how it works or to make it work better. Have you thought about hacking headphones? The folks at Amateur Logic TV have!

Amateur Radio on the Moon

The First Amateur Radio Station on the Moon, JS1YMG, is Now Transmitting, trumpets the headline on the ARRL News web page.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) successfully landed their Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) on January 19, 2024. Just before touchdown, SLIM released two small lunar surface probes, LEV-1 and LEV-2.

EOC almost in my backyard

This news item has special interest for me because it is almost in my backyard. I have spent a lot of time in Wahkiakum County, Washington where a high school is proposed to become the site for a new emergency operations center. It’s an interesting idea that has some local benefits, according to the proponents. Click here to read more.

Tailscale deep dive

On AmateurRadio.com, a topic I’m deeply engaged in: Tailscale. I run Tailscale on almost all of my computing devices. With the intersection of radio and computing, that means my AllStarLink nodes are also part of my Tailnet. Click here for more at Linux, Open Source and Amateur Radio for Everyone.

Thank you Steve Stroh

I extend a special thank you to fellow radio writer Steve Stroh N8GNJ, author of the Zero Retries newsletter, for calling out my Easy AllStarLink post. Steve always has great information in his newsletter. I recommend it.

Thank you David Gleason

Recently, David Gleason NR9V mentioned my Debian 12 and AllStarLink on 3040 Thin Client post in his Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/allscan/.

David is the person behind AllScan:

AllScan provides Favorites Management features, Connection Monitoring & Control functions, and a Dashboard View integrating Live AllStarLink Stats Data.

I use AllScan on all of my AllStarLink nodes because it is so darned convenient. David also builds nodes. If you’re interested in AllStarLink and nodes, his website at https://allscan.info is definitely worth getting immersed in.


Project: Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard

I am intrigued by small computers. My desktop is a small Beelink-brand box. I have way too many small tablets. My new preferred laptop is a ThinkPad X1: light and powerful enough for my uses.

So when I ran across the Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard again, I paused and considered whether to add another RPi to my pile of devices. Says raspberrypi.com:

Featuring a quad-core 64-bit processor, 4GB of RAM, wireless networking, dual-display output, and 4K video playback, as well as a 40-pin GPIO header, Raspberry Pi 400 is a powerful, easy-to-use computer built into a neat and portable keyboard.

Pretty soon I was filling out the order form and awaiting delivery of the 400.

TL;DR – I’m running Ubuntu Desktop 23.10 on a Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard, with more tests to come.

Unboxing

The device came nicely packaged. The keyboard is a comfortable size with chiclet-style keys that are quiet, not clicky.

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Tom Salzer

Tom is an Extra Class amateur radio operator licensed in the United States as KJ7T

Tom Salzer KJ7T