Talk:Chirp spread spectrum

Reading helps. Clarity is provided with the references. Not all known references are publicly accessible. wireless friend (talk) 11:08, 25 April 2008 (UTC)

Technical/ethical question: Does ambient temperature have any connection to choice of modulation? Or is "Some areas where this type of technology can be useful are medical applications, logistics (i.e. containers need to be tracked), and government/security applications. Nanotron even tested the TRX Transceiver for industrial monitoring and control in a steel mill and it survived when the computer and display that were interfacing with it failed because of the heat" just advertising? 62.183.179.122 (talk) 17:06, 4 February 2013 (UTC)

nanoLOC is another such system
nanoLOC, produced by Nanotron Technologies GmbH, Germany, also produces ranging devices using CSS. --Pot (talk) 09:37, 3 July 2013 (UTC)

LoRa, the growing technology, seems to use CSS
13:38, 1 June 2015 (UTC)

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Presence of logo
Moving this from a talk page:

The Chirp Spread Spectrum modulation is not a product, brand, or company. While I understand your effort, Chirp Spread Spectrum is a pretty generic concept, and there is no precedence for giving concepts and non-products logos. This is like if someone gave Water, Frequency modulation, or the Fourier transform a logo. If Chirp Spread Spectrum was given a logo by the company that created it, it could be added if it falls under copyright fair use, but I don't believe this is the case.

User RFgeek says:

"I personally custom designed this graphic for CSS and don't see any good reason why it should be removed but welcome feedback by other editors."

"Requires feedback from other editors not from the editor who revoked my edit. Editor argues that a frequency-specific logo is not appropriate; this is a CSS icon in the same way that WiFi has an icon. Given the limited popularity of CSS, the neutral branding (there is no organizational or individual affiliation being made) there is no justifiable reason to remove something that enhances the page"

From me:

The Wi-Fi logo has been created by the Wi-Fi Alliance, an organization which certifies and coordinates implementation of 802.11* protocols. Chirp Spread Spectrum has no such organization, nor is it a single standard for data transmission. Like I said, there is not reason to create a logo in such circumstances, as it is a generic idea.

I am willing to list this on Third opinion for a 3rd party opinion, however it is recommended to discuss it here first. Kreuner (talk) 11:04, 16 December 2023 (UTC)