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Marcus Müller

Marcus Müller holds a BSc and MSc in Electrical Engineering and Information Technology from KIT, with a strong focus on Communications Technology and Software Defined Radio.

He's been involved with the GNU Radio project for more than a decade, and fills an architect position within it since 2018.

His teaching experiences involve supervising numerous student theses in his field, being responsible for the practical courses in Probability Theory, Communications Engineering, Applied Information Theory and others. Gathering experience in a wide range of fields, he's been a consulting contractor for SDR manufacturers, software projects, and is currently focusing on satellite communications, and has held workshops on Software Defined Radio for a variety of audiences.

Radio Signal Processing – the GNU Radio Way

Status: Not yet available - Stay tuned!

GNU Radio is a framework to implement software-defined radio applications on standard PC hardware, embedded systems (from handheld spectrum analyzers to Raspberry Pis) to servers. This talk will take the surprise out of how to implement a very simple transmitter and a matching receiver application, where to go from there, how to improve upon existing designs, and address common pitfalls.

The audience will be introduced to the flowgraph as a means of describing a signal processing application, to core GNU Radio concepts, important design patterns, and how they interact with common communications engineering approaches. As a prerequisite for following the talk, you should be familiar with the basics of signals. An understanding of complex baseband and IQ signals will enhance the value of the talk to the reader, but is not strictly necessary.

To (optionally) replicate the examples shown, a computer running a recent version of Windows, Linux, or Mac OS on which the user is able to install software is required.

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