--- On Mon, 9/8/08, Uri Shkolnik <urishk@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > First I would like to present myself (I'm new to this forum) A hearty Welcome from my side, and I hope you have a pleasant stay. Please help yourself to the refreshments from the bar, and have a kipper. ;-) > I don't know what should be done next, which API (and > sub-system) should be added first, second, ... (or not at > all?). I have my own views (CMMB getting much more audience > than DVB-H and ISDB-T more than the DAB family). Of course, this will depend on your location -- in some parts of Europe, DVB-H is available as an (subscription) option and DAB is widespread from the provider-point-of-view. It is from my perspective in Europe that I write, where ISDB-T is not used, but DAB hardware is relatively difficult to find. Still, DAB services have been widely available for a longer time than DVB-T has been operating. > One point regarding Siano non-DVB offering - With Michael > Krufky's help, I'm trying to find a way to add > Siano's non-DVB(-T) offering into the kernel's code > base (till now we supply a proprietary sources directly to > our customers). When you say `customers', do you mean business customers, for example, TerraTec, which has incorporated your device into the Cinergy Piranha, which I have, and for which the TerraTec-supplied 'Doze media player can sort-of successfully play the available DAB stations? Or do you mean, `end-users' (fnarr) such as myself, who want to use this device under Linux, for more than DVB-T? Here is my biggest question, which probably could be answered if I used a Real Web Browser. My Internet access is mostly through a SSH connection to a text- only web-browser on a trusted host, usually on a borrowed connection. So I don't have access to Javascript links, or other non-text offerings -- and often I have no access at all, so I've sort of adopted a UUCP-like way of `working', for some values of `work'. In Mr. Krufky's work, I've seen reference to Siano-provided drivers as an alternative to those which he's painstakingly adapted and included in the mainstream. Unfortunately for me, the link is to the main webpage, and from there, normal links lead nowhere interesting. There are plenty of Javascript links that I can't follow. So, I haven't found anything which might help me to answer my further questions myself, and for that, I must apologise. > Of course it will be somewhat specific code > by the fact that it'll match Siano's chipset instead > of be more generic. I don't see this as a real problem, because I don't know how to weave a generic API from the DAB/DAB+ specs that I've read. I was hoping to find a diagram of the demodulation process for DAB streams, from the OFDM RF carrier (handled by the hardware) to the mp2/AAC+ audio decoding (in Linux, handled by a userspace software player). Unfortunately, I could not find anything... Had I found something, I would ask you, if it is not obvious from freely-available code to customers, just where in the chain of decoding, your hardware outputs a stream. I mean, if I supply a channel number such as 12C (VHF), would I be seeing the entire multiplex from which I could extract one particular service, or can I expect something more specific? I suspect that I would likely find that with different devices (of the few that are available), I'd be tapping into the demodulation-demultiplexing chain at different points, therefore needing to be able to tweak the devices differently appropriate to where I tap into the chain. But then, I really don't know what I'm talking about. thanks, barry bouwsma _______________________________________________ linux-dvb mailing list linux-dvb@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linux-dvb