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Ben Ryan benryanau at hotmail.comHey mate this looks really great! I've dreamed about building something similar for an RTLSDR, but much fancier (ping-pong on 'interesting' chirps, yo-yo sweeps to find voice/burst comms, trended plots etc etc). A poor man's wideband spectrum analyser. But I can't code to save my life.. However, wait long enough and funny things happen :) You've made a great start with this project, especially given there was NOTHING out there prior (that I've seen anyhow. Certainly for Win32.) All the module/package dependencies are a bit of a pain but hey, you've got a working app :) Love to try it soon when I get a chance, hope you develop it up into a full-bllown RTLSDR spectrum analyser / "interesting signal" finder! Cheers ben > Message: 1 > Date: Mon, 21 Jan 2013 16:53:01 +0000 > From: Al <al at eartoearoak.com> > To: osmocom-sdr at lists.osmocom.org > Subject: RTL-SDR Scanner/Plotter > Message-ID: <50FD726D.5010000 at eartoearoak.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > > Hi, > > I thought you may be interested in a program I've written, it's a Python > GUI which scans a set of frequencies and plots the resulting levels, > which can be saved for later viewing or exported to a CSV file. > > Source: https://github.com/EarToEarOak/RTLSDR-Scanner > More info: http://www.eartoearoak.com/software/rtlsdr-scanner > > I wrote it to help me find signals over a wide bandwidth, to get a > better view of the RF space. I hope you find it useful. > > Al > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.osmocom.org/pipermail/osmocom-sdr/attachments/20130123/04547cfc/attachment.htm>