Hello from OKC
 
I hope more of you can discover D-Star and use all of its features.  I  am 
on the Edmond club repeater and am on the OU repeater on Thursdays when I  
come for my noon Rotary Club meeting and to check on a house I have for sale  
east of the repeater site.  Look forward to working you.
 
73's
 
Larry, W5NZS
 
 
In a message dated 11/28/2012 10:00:05 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

Someone  at the meeting asked about D-STAR.  We should probably have a  
presentation about this, but in the mean time, here are a few  tidbits.

Digital Smart Technologies for Amateur Radio is a protocol  developed by 
the Japanese version of the ARRL.  Sadly, only Icom has  chosen to incorporate 
it into their radios.  Yaesu and Alinco both have  digital radios, but 
neither are D-STAR nor are they compatible with each other  (AFAIK).  

D-STAR uses a proprietary chip to encode an operator's  voice so that it 
fits into a very narrow-bandwidth data stream.  Data can  also be carried 
along with the voice, though at only 1,200 bits/second (the  Ethernet in the 
Weather Center runs at 1,000,000,000 bits/second with 10x that  on the 
backbone).  *However*, that's actually plenty of bandwidth for  text and there are 
applications that will let you send email over  D-STAR.  This is helpful in 
emergency situations where internet is not  available.  128,000 bits/second 
are available on the 1.2-GHz  band.

There are D-STAR repeaters and we have one thanks to K5MEM.   What's neat 
about the repeater is that in addition to functioning like a  regular FM 
repeater (listen to the input, retransmit on the output), the  repeater is also 
connected to an internet gateway.  To use that, you need  to register 
yourself (using your callsign) at https://w5tc.nwc.ou.edu/ (click  on 
"Registration").

The club also has a pair of Icom ID-31A  handitalkies and a DVDongle, a 
device that you connect to your computer that  allows you to connect to our 
gateway from "the other side" and communicate  with folks on the air.

Lots of good stuff on the web so I won't bore  you all.   

http://www.dstarusers.org/
http://www.dstarinfo.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-STAR


--
Peter  Laws / N5UWY
National Weather Center / Network Operations  Center
University of Oklahoma Information Technology
[log in to unmask]  (Remote)
College of Architecture, Regional and City Planning, MRCP  '16