I got mine last Fall. DMR over Internet/ethernet is sometimes dodgy
because servers get bogged down with too much traffic or other
background tasks having nought to do with DMR, but the whole Py-Star
experience with the Rugged Spot has been a good one overall. You take it
out of the box and plug it in, and it just works. That's because you
provide all the local configuration stuff--your call sign, your DMR ID,
your local Wi-Fi information, etc.--to the Rugged Spot people before you
receive your unit.
On 4/21/2019 7:42 AM, Keith Barrett wrote:
Hello,===========================================================
Do you have any update to this?
I just got a dmr radio but the local repeater only carries talkgroup 9
so I am in the same position.
Any advice from any one who has used the pi in this way?
On 11/08/2018 02:36, Steve Matzura wrote:
I'm an amature radio operator, call sign WB2KTV since 1969, and have===========================================================
just purchased a device called the Rugged Spot, which is an interesting
bit of hardware and software that connects a digital-mode ham radio to
the Internet via a custom-built device with a Pi 3-B at its core. I
really wanted the Shark RF OpenSpot, which is a bit simpler device I
think, but it's discontinued, pending the release of a new model, which
is already eight months late on delivery, so I found out about this one,
it's fairly new, got good reviews, runs on a Pi, so I went for it. It
hasn't arrived yet, so I can't tell you anything more about it, but it
occurred to me that if it runs on a 3-B, the possibility should exist to
be able to put some kind of speech on it, at least for setup purposes.
Has anyone (A) heard of this device, and (B) tried putting Orca or
Speakup on it to run its dashboard software? If you want to take a look
at the image, you can get it from
https://www.pistar.uk/downloads/Pi-Star_RPi_V3.4.16_10-Aug-2018.zip. And
I don't think the fact that it runs on a Pi and its current version
number is 3.4.16 are relevant or connected, although it gave me a good
chuckle when I saw it. The Web page at hamradio1.com said the latest
version was 3.4.11 from back in March, 3.4.16 just came out yesterday.
The whole system is a bit geeky, but totally software-driven, very
open-ended and flexible. Somebody take the shot and tell us all what you
think about adding some kind of speech to this image, or taking it apart
and putting the necessary components on an already running image. I'm
hoping against hope that the supplied operating system is something we
know about, and not something custom-designed and -built.
===========================================================
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-----------------------------------------------------------
Raspberry Pi and the Raspberry Pi logo are trademarks of the Raspberry Pi
Foundation.
This list is not affiliated to the Raspberry Pi Foundation and the views and
attitudes expressed by the subscribers to this list do not reflect those of
the Foundation.
Mike Ray, list creator, January 2013