Open-Source-Chip-Design (eh23)

Open-Source-Chip-Design (eh23)

Author: CCC media team April 4, 2026 Duration: 59:21
Open-source chip-design initiatives and EDA tools are enabling affordable, workflows from SystemVerilog to GDS-II, making custom ASICs accessible even to hobbyists. As a demonstration, a collaboration between JKU Linz and the University of Würzburg realized the first fully integrated WSPR transmitter IC using the Tiny Tapeout 130 nm mixed-signal process, eliminating the need for PCs, microcontrollers, or FPGAs. The chip combines a digital subsystem that generates WSPR symbols using CORDIC and sigma-delta modulation with an analog RF chain that performs IQ modulation, filtering, and amplification, proving that real-world amateur radio applications can be implemented entirely with open-source tools. Initiatives such as Google Skywater, IHP130, and Tiny Tapeout, coupled with the collaboration of open-source tools like LibreLane or Yosys, are poised to democratize chip design. This approach eliminates the need for commercial EDA tools, making the production of custom chips using multi-project wafers and chips significantly more affordable – even for hobbyists. This presentation will elucidate the intricacies of such a workflow, from the design level entry using system Verilog to the generation of GDS-II files. As an example for a HAM-Radio application an WSPR-Transmitter is implemented on a chips just by using open-source EDA-Tools and workflows. Weak Signal Propagation Reporter (WSPR, pronounced “whisper”) is a well-known tool in amateur radio for analyzing the propagation of shortwave signals. These signals are refracted by the ionosphere, allowing them to travel remarkable distances around the globe, even with just small transmit powers of just a few milliwatts. The tool, developed by Nobel laureate Joe Taylor (K1JT), typically requires a PC running dedicated software and a shortwave transmitter. While numerous embedded implementations have been created in the past—using microcontrollers or FPGAs — there has so far been no integrated circuit that provides native WSPR functionality. Until now! In a collaboration between JKU Linz and the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, we have implemented a fully WSPR-capable transmitter in the TT-Sky25b process—realized as a 130 nm analog mixed-signal design via Tiny Tapeout. The design shown in the image, consists of two major components: a digital subsystem that generates the transmit symbols from the message information (operator callsign, power level, and location), and an analog subsystem that performs the actual RF modulation. The digital part uses a CORDIC IP block and a sigma-delta modulator to produce a complex analog baseband signal. This signal is then modulated by an IQ-Modulator, filtered, and amplified by a fully analog RF chain. This work is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ about this event: https://pretalx.eh23.easterhegg.eu/eh23/talk/EXAEAE/

Tune into the Chaos Computer Club-recent events feed for a direct line to the forefront of digital culture and critical technology discourse. Curated by the CCC media team, this podcast channels the raw, insightful atmosphere of Europe's most influential hacker association, bringing you recordings from their major gatherings and community events. Each episode is a deep dive into talks and presentations from the last two years, covering topics from cryptography and privacy rights to hardware hacking, societal impacts of surveillance, and open-source philosophy. You'll hear from researchers, activists, and engineers who are actively shaping our digital future, offering perspectives rarely found in mainstream tech conversations. This isn't a produced show with hosts; it's an archival audio stream of genuine conference sessions, complete with audience questions and the spontaneous energy of the live event. For anyone interested in the technical details and ethical debates at the heart of modern technology, this feed serves as an essential, unfiltered resource. Subscribe to this podcast to keep your finger on the pulse of the Chaos Computer Club's ongoing dialogue, where complex ideas are broken down and the tools for a more empowered digital life are openly discussed.
Author: Episodes: 100

Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed
Podcast Episodes
Implementing OCPP 1.6 CentralSystem for Fun and Profit (glt26) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:57
None Starting with 2026 I gained access to an OCPP 1.6 conform EV WallBox. Thus I decided to implement a OCPP 1.6 based CentralSystem in Rust. As of today the system is able to handle all messages initiated by the Chargi…
Gaming mit Linux statt Windows - Wie gut geht das? (glt26) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 30:23
None Mit dem Auslaufen des Windows 10 Supports und der drastisch gestiegenen Unattraktivität von Windows 11 gewinnt Linux zunehmend an Bedeutung als Gaming-Plattform. Gaming-optimierte Distributionen wie Bazzite oder Cac…
Die Stärken des Device Mappers - von dm-cache bis dm-zoned (glt26) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 26:52
None Der Device Mapper ist seit der Kernel-Version 2.6 – und somit seit mehr als 20 Jahren – Bestandteil des Linux-Kernels. Er ermöglicht die Bereitstellung virtueller Blockgeräte, indem er deren Adressraum auf andere Bl…
From Video to Summary: An Open Source AI Workflow (glt26) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 48:16
None Video content is everywhere, but extracting key information from hours of recordings is time-consuming. Cloud-based transcription and summarization services exist, but they come with privacy concerns, recurring cost…
Proxmox Datacenter Manager (glt26) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 43:01
None In einer zunehmend verteilten IT-Landschaft kann das Management mehrerer einzelner Proxmox-Nodes und Cluster schnell zu einer Herausforderung werden. Der Proxmox Datacenter Manager bringt Ordnung in diese Vielfalt:…