Difference between revisions of "User:Caio/Unravel the code v"

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= Week 2 =
 +
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== A look at  [[RTL-SDR]] ==
 +
 +
We use the RTL device to try to receive some interesting signals on our computer.
 +
I personally found this way of find signals very difficult and not very precise. Difficult in the way that you need to expend a lot of time and patience to go through the channels waiting to see some signal, you also need to count with a little of lucky, because sometimes you pass by a channel but it's not being used by the time you were on it, so you consider it has nothing there.
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[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita01.jpg | 500px]] [[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita02.jpg | 500px]]
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[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita03.jpg | 500px]]
 +
 +
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'''Favorites on gqrx app (some of the channels where I found the following audios)'''
 +
 +
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita04.jpg | 500px]]
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 +
'''Audios'''
 +
 +
'''Playlist on Soundcloud'''
 +
 +
[[File:soundcloud-CaioVita.png | 500px]] https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/sets/rtl-sdr-audio-record/s-XCC3A
 +
 +
Mixed audio in photoshop
 +
 +
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita05.png | 500px]]
 +
 +
https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/mix-photoshop-sdr/s-0zBlN
 +
 +
== Experiment with Nina ==
 +
 +
Also on this week I did an experimentation with Nina, with the software MMSSTV, we use our computers to send some images from her computer to mine, through sound waves. I was thinking the same concept could be apply to radio. So we could have a transmitter sending the image converted to sound as wave signals, then anyone with a radio and a computer could listening to the station and receive the image on their screen.
 +
 +
 +
[[File:RTL-mmsstv-CaioVita01.png | 500px]]  [[File:mmsstv-CaioVita02.png | 500px]]
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 +
[[File:mmsstv-CaioVita03.png | 500px]]
  
 
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Line 503: Line 539:
  
 
----
 
----
 
= Week 2 =
 
 
== A look at  [[RTL-SDR]] ==
 
 
We use the RTL device to try to receive some interesting signals on our computer.
 
I personally found this way of find signals very difficult and not very precise. Difficult in the way that you need to expend a lot of time and patience to go through the channels waiting to see some signal, you also need to count with a little of lucky, because sometimes you pass by a channel but it's not being used by the time you were on it, so you consider it has nothing there.
 
 
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita01.jpg | 500px]] [[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita02.jpg | 500px]]
 
 
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita03.jpg | 500px]]
 
 
 
'''Favorites on gqrx app (some of the channels where I found the following audios)'''
 
 
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita04.jpg | 500px]]
 
 
'''Audios'''
 
 
'''Playlist on Soundcloud'''
 
 
[[File:soundcloud-CaioVita.png | 500px]] https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/sets/rtl-sdr-audio-record/s-XCC3A
 
 
Mixed audio in photoshop
 
 
[[File:RTL-SDR-CaioVita05.png | 500px]]
 
 
https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/mix-photoshop-sdr/s-0zBlN
 
 
== Experiment with Nina ==
 
 
Also on this week I did an experimentation with Nina, with the software MMSSTV, we use our computers to send some images from her computer to mine, through sound waves. I was thinking the same concept could be apply to radio. So we could have a transmitter sending the image converted to sound as wave signals, then anyone with a radio and a computer could listening to the station and receive the image on their screen.
 
 
 
[[File:RTL-mmsstv-CaioVita01.png | 500px]]  [[File:mmsstv-CaioVita02.png | 500px]]
 
 
[[File:mmsstv-CaioVita03.png | 500px]]
 

Revision as of 23:20, 29 January 2017

Week 1

Radio wave basics document If you look at the diagram of the electromagnetic spectrum above, you will notice that radio waves have the longest wavelengths of the spectrum. To give you an idea of how long radio waves can be AM radio waves can be longer than a football field, while FM radio waves are short in comparison – only about 3 meters long!

HERE

Workshop

On the first workshop, I pair up with Sara to try to make an FM Transmitter using a breadboard.

We follow this tutorial How to make FM transmitter.

We were able to plug everything right, but we couldn't find the right tune to listening to the transmitter.

Fm-transmitter-Schematics.jpg

On the tutorial they gave us a formula to find out the right tune,

 L = [(d^2)(n^2)] / [18d + 40l]
 L – in uH (inductor)
 d – in inches (coil diameter)
 l – coil length in inches
 n – number of turns

But it didn't work as expected. The failed transmitter was exposed together with the other students work at the Radiation - Digital Craft exhibition.

FM tramsinter Caio Sara.jpg

Radio Projects

Architecture of Radio by Richard Vijgen

" The Architecture of Radio, a new exhibition by Dutch designer Richard Vijgen that uses an augmented reality iPad app to visualize the network of radio waves that surrounds us, revealing the invisible traffic of smartphones, GPS units, Wi-Fi routers, cell towers, overhead satellites, and more."

Architecture of Radio Screen.jpg

"As an information designer, I'm interested in visualizing things we cannot see. Most of the information we consume is 
 delivered to us over the air via radio waves . . . We are connected 24/7 through devices that communicate wirelessly 
 over Wi-Fi or cellular networks, yet contrary to the radio towers and transmission stations of the early days of radio, 
 the infrastructure that underpins our information society is barely visible. Wi-Fi routers are hidden behind bookshelves 
 and cell towers are mounted to existing buildings or disguised as trees."


Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine by Steve Mann

With the S.W.I.M. (Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine) you can see otherwise invisible sound waves and radio waves, imprinted onto your retina, onto photographic media, or eyeglass/camera.

This is due to something I call Phenomenological or Phenomenal Augmented Reality, i.e. the AR (Augmented Reality) of physical phenomena


Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine.gif

SWIM Steve Mann.png

PhenomenalAugmentedReality first 2 pages lowres.jpg

You can find a tutorial of how to build one here


Tree Radio Installation at YSP

"This work addresses issues surrounding the rate that new digital technology often becomes out-of-date, as it uses 100 year old tried and tested wireless technology. I have been working at the intersection between art and technology and this project takes forward my current interests.

I wanted to make people think about trees and the root of all wireless technology: radio, and how simple and green it can be to use. Wireless, free and solar powered. The tree transmitter reveals the hidden facets of organic tree life using simple FM wireless technology."

Treewireless.jpg


Video of the Project

You can read more about this project here
and more Radio Projects at Radio Arts

Week 2

A look at RTL-SDR

We use the RTL device to try to receive some interesting signals on our computer. I personally found this way of find signals very difficult and not very precise. Difficult in the way that you need to expend a lot of time and patience to go through the channels waiting to see some signal, you also need to count with a little of lucky, because sometimes you pass by a channel but it's not being used by the time you were on it, so you consider it has nothing there.

RTL-SDR-CaioVita01.jpg RTL-SDR-CaioVita02.jpg

RTL-SDR-CaioVita03.jpg


Favorites on gqrx app (some of the channels where I found the following audios)

RTL-SDR-CaioVita04.jpg

Audios

Playlist on Soundcloud
Soundcloud-CaioVita.png https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/sets/rtl-sdr-audio-record/s-XCC3A
Mixed audio in photoshop

RTL-SDR-CaioVita05.png
https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/mix-photoshop-sdr/s-0zBlN

Experiment with Nina

Also on this week I did an experimentation with Nina, with the software MMSSTV, we use our computers to send some images from her computer to mine, through sound waves. I was thinking the same concept could be apply to radio. So we could have a transmitter sending the image converted to sound as wave signals, then anyone with a radio and a computer could listening to the station and receive the image on their screen.


RTL-mmsstv-CaioVita01.png Mmsstv-CaioVita02.png

Mmsstv-CaioVita03.png


Week 3

Imaginary Radio

Prism

Think of the radio wave as the same way as light. Mirrors reflect radio waves

"Can I use a prism to affect radio waves? If yes, how can I use it in a creative way to experience radio waves?

Prismschem01.jpg

Text a about how diffraction and reflection affects radio waves
How do diffraction gratings affect radio waves

How does prism affect the behaviour of a Radar device (Radio Detection and Ranging)?

Radar caio.gif

Concept

My imaginary Radio uses prism to make an interference on the signal that it's capturing to create noise and translate to visuals.

Imaginary radio caio.jpg Imaginary radio caio2.jpg


Imaginary radio caio1.jpg



Workshop MICA

A day of workshop with students fro MICA. I was on the group Post-Radio Aesthetics and was assigned to build the Transmiters together with Kate Smith.

Post-Radio Aesthetics

Mica-Caio01.jpg

Mica-Caio02.png
Mica-Caio03.png



Q10 proposal

Using radio waves to create an image

My idea is to make a box that would work as a radio transmitter. I live just across a big church on a very busy street at Rotterdam. From my window I can project into the facade of the church. The box would be an installation at the street with some instructions of how to create the image. The signal would be similar to morse code, but with a color code. The person on the street can create an image that is 32 x 32 pixels. So they would have to send 32 color code trough the transmitter. The receiver for it would be a Arduino attached to the beamer that is being pointed at the church faced. The image will be create in real time by the person using the small box transmitter at the street. In the end they can choose to tweet their image, it would be twitter bot with the hashtag tweeting the images that were created through the morse code.

Radioconcept caio01.png Radioconcept caio02.png
Radioconcept caio04.png  Radioconcept caio05.png

---

Q10 Project

Concept Q10 (work with Nina)

How can you use radio to transmit something beyond sound?


Radio is often only seen as a medium to transmit music and information to people. The question that arose was how can we use radio to transmit something beyond sound? This collection investigates a broad range of aesthetic experiments with the broadcasting technology of radio. For us it is also an inquiry of intervention of this art form.This collection aims to rethink and reconceptualise the radio medium as an explorative archive.The goal of this collection is to create a temporary autonomous zone of art to communicate artistic compositions for interpretation. Proposing an alternate way to experiencing art through the radio.

KEYWORDS

- image distortion with radio waves - fm transmitter - MMSSTV software - collection - transmition of images - shapes&colors - media - mixing sound and images - blueprint - audacity






SSTV SOFTWARE

[1]

SSTV, or Slow-Scan Television, is a picture transmission method, used mainly by amateur radio operators, to transmit and receive static pictures via radio in monochrome or color. To send and receive messages, you need to connect your amateur radio rig to a computer, and then use software to send and decode images. Pictures typically take about one minute to be received. Most famously, SSTV was used to send back some of the first pictures of Space and the Moon. The most famous picture being this one from the Apollo 11 mission which shows Neil Armstrong descending a ladder to become the first human to step onto the surface of the Moon.



  Apollo 11 first step (1).jpg




TRANSMI.jpg

STEP 1 Building the FM transmitter

SimplestTX00 (1).jpg tutorial: [2]


20170129 192717 Burst01.png 20170129 192756.png


20170129 192747.png 20170129 192735.png



20161206 130308.jpg 16128210 1571073152922326 1072275236 n.jpg 16128111 1571073189588989 534335514 n.jpg


16118576 1571073216255653 1002311950 n.jpg 16144539 1571073142922327 2136426177 n.jpg 16128737 1571073139588994 1636424658 n.jpg


16128008 1571073229588985 244410319 n.jpg 16144491 1571073166255658 1848127130 n.jpg 16128381 1571073172922324 442367501 n.jpg


Testing dinstance-timing-volume using MMSSTV software

After many tests we decided that Scottie Modes: 1, 2 & DX was the best mode to use to decode the images in terms of speed and clarity.

-DISTANCE -TIMING -VOLUME


20161206 134931.jpg 20161206 140713.jpg 20161206 142522.jpg

20161206 142532.jpg 20161206 142535.jpg 20161206 142538.jpg


20161206 142546.jpg 20161206 142751.jpg



15409709 10154738299588349 755379716 o.jpg 201612061320.jpg


20161206 142551.jpg 20161206 142741.jpg 20161206 142556.jpg



Segment.jpg


2016120613102.jpg 201612061310.jpg 201612061313.jpg 201612061305.jpg


20161206 140733.jpg




SMPTE Color Bars.svg.png


20161206 144748.jpg 20161206 144704.jpg


scotie dx - testing patterns using two laptops

Test Pattern.jpg


                                 16426515 1584791331550508 1916869057 n.jpg


Test Card.jpg


                                 Dgd.png




Colour-bars.jpg


                                 16402308 1584698614893113 189758253 n.png




20170129 133301 818549230.png 20170129 133854 1257614653.png





TESTING photography

254309 1574992554262 4719380 n.jpg 201612191326.jpg


SISIS.jpg



15320228 10154792078643349 857927854 n.jpg 201612191340.jpg


Caio.jpg


audacity

combination of 2 images

First, we transmitted separately the two images and then we mixed the sound using audacity of each image to create a new one.


201612191340.jpg 201612191345.jpg


Screen Shot 2016-12-19 at 15.13.39.png 201612191419.jpg


Comp.png


colors

We did this experiment to extract the SSTV sound from each color of the color wheel (primary and secondary only). After having the pure sound of each color, we mixed it with Audacity (sound mixing software) to see if we could create new images compositions through the color's sounds. Then we broadcast this new mixes to get the new image on the SSTV software. The results were not very exciting visually because the software makes one sound for a line, so the only kind of composition possible was one line each color.


Color.jpg



Colortest.png

Mixed test:

Mixedcolortest.jpg


Test with ECHO Effect applied to to sound through Audacity


Echotest.jpg

Effects applied on the SSTV Audio via Audacity

Audacitytestescard.png

Audacitytestes.jpg





TESTING App Robot36 - SSTV Image Decoder

We use the app to act as the receiver of some test images using both our mobiles at the same time.

[3]


Αρχείο λήψης.png


                                    Nina's phone                                                
                                    16295804 1582487175114257 293805058 n.png 


                                     Caio's phone
                                     20170127 155505 999657545.jpg


Patterns1.jpg


                                   Nina's phone                                                
                                  16395777 1582493395113635 1845498767 n.png 


                                   Caio's phone
                                  DERT.png 


Αρχείο λήψης.jpg


                                  Nina's phone                                                
                                  16358504 1582534095109565 1076810133 n.png


                                  Caio's phone
                                  20170127 161149 571842198.png



Typ.jpg


                                 Nina's phone                                                
                                 Typ3.png


                                  Caio's phone
                                  Typ5.png



Typ2.jpg


                                  Nina's phone                                                
                                 Typ4.png


                                  Caio's phone
                                  Typ6.png



Personal development and artwork

With all the knowledge and findings we extend our collection by creating artwork using the same technique. CreatING a temporary autonomous zone of art to communicate our own artistic compositions for interpretation. Proposing an alternate way to experiencing art through the radio.


Nina ARTWORK


KUKLOS.gif


                Kuklos9.jpg   16244322 1580216968674611 1790105465 n.png



                NUMERIC.jpg     16237025 1579058875457087 1724840675 n.png