On 11/22/21 00:47, Hans wrote: > Hi Georgi, > > yes, that sounds interesting. And fingerprinting of a transceiver is the main > thing. Thus, for example, you can identify people's radio transceivers, they > use to radio interfere. I am a licensed radio amateur, and those people are > often doing this on repeaters. > > They want to be anonymous, however, many of them are also licensed radio > amateurs, and their callsigns are known. > > Of course they are using the same radio transmitters for normal trafficing, > and so they could be identified. This is the same technics our > "Bundesnetzagentur" is using (the radio government). > > It would also give the ability, to supress those people on the repeaters, > when > they misuse it. For example, an unlicensed radio could be filtered out, so > that its transmission will not be send by the repeaters. > > And as the range of a handheld transceiver is not large, only a small area > would be interfered - not the whole area the radio repeater is covering. > > I did not find any similar solution to xmit-id, especially none for linux. If > you know one, I will be happy, to point me at them. > > If you know one, this would be interesting, so it could maybe run on a small > computer, like a Raspberry Pi. > > These are just my thoughts, why I stumbled over this application, and maybe > others would be interested, too. > > As I know, there are also bibg applications ported from DOS to linux (like > doom), I thoughtm that would be easy - just start a cross compiler, then fix > some issues, ready. But I believe, it is not that easy, I suppose, this is a > lot lot lot work. And as far as I understood, code from DOS C is far from > similar to Linux C. > > That is a pity, but good to know, if I might some time begin to code myself: > I > won't never ever code for DOS or Windows or any proprietrary OS! Never! > > Have a very nice day! > > Best regards >
Hi Hans, I just gave an idea and I'm far away from this field. Kind regards Georgi