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153 lines
9.2 KiB
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153 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 136
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Title: HPR0136: Intercepting Satellite Transmissions
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0136/hpr0136.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 12:16:14
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---
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.]
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Hello, I'm Drakenews. It is 2 in the morning and you are listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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We've got to keep our voices down because we're outside in the park and are rather populated
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housing community and they have security and I'm standing out here with a laptop
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and large pieces of radio equipment and stuff so we need to be quiet so do not attract attention.
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We're going to be intercepting photos from satellites so doesn't it sound cool?
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The NOAA is 17, it's about to pass over, it's two something, it should be here in a couple minutes.
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And what that is is that's a lower orbiting weather satellite that constantly transmits photos down kind of what you see on the
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news and we're going to go ahead and snag the pictures as best we can from that.
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Now NOAA is the NOAA, is the National Oceanic and atmosphere administration.
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I think it's a US only, a pretty certain and they have two satellites in orbit, two types rather.
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Geo stationery, which is what you see on the news, the large ones that can update the fast and digital
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and kind of the older ones which are the polar orbiting ones and they're called Leo's low earth orbiting satellites.
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So there are three active Leo's and this one is the NOAA 17.
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I can also grab the NOAA 15 and the NOAA 18 but at the NOAA 17 it's coming up.
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These satellites operate on 137 megahertz and transmit with about five watts in about 800 to 3000 kilometers in the air.
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Five watts doesn't carry very far.
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The biggest problem we have though with taking up on these satellites is that they're using 300 kilohertz bandwidth because they transmit a lot of information.
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And I'm using a radio scanner that cannot pick up a bandwidth that wide so we're not getting as much information.
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And that's going to be a problem that most people are going to have when they try to do this.
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So what you're going to do is you're going to need a radio receiver.
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I'm using a scanner from RadioShack.
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It's a piece of crap from like the 80s but it does a great job because you don't need a lot of receiving power.
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You just need a decent thing.
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You can actually take a cheap FM radio just like a standard radio and just tune it up because 100 to 7 megahertz isn't that far from the typical FM spectrum.
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It's like 100 in some megahertz.
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You need to kind of have a lot of technical knowledge that go in modified FM radio.
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But if you're really cheap and you have a lot of time, you can find instructions.
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It's not that hard.
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You also need an antenna.
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No, you know, the organization actually uses quadrifillo helix antennas, which is considered like, you know, the holy grail of antennas for this purpose.
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But I'm using a disco antenna right now that was made for like 800 megahertz but it was made for only made so it's going to work just fine for this.
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I've also heard that a linen wand, a linen plan, how are you say it?
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The antenna works great and it was easy to make, I've heard.
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And I was using a dieboard antenna early just to play around.
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And that barely worked in the style I just directly above me.
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So I would recommend, you know, you make the antenna.
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That's just these specifications.
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But I'm going to use this one.
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I think it's going to work.
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You also need a computer to do the actual image processing.
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I'm using a laptop right now.
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It's, you know, it's like a dual-core machine.
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It's so overpowered for doing this.
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But if you have like an old, like a penny immuno machine lying around,
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you can set up a dedicated station because you can do this with Linux Windows or I think you can back now.
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And, you know, just have a station that sits there all day and receives your own satellite images, if you really didn't do the idea.
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You also need a good sound card because what we're doing is we're taking the audio from the receiver, which in my case is a scanner.
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And processing that and creating an image from it.
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So I'd recommend getting a USB sound card because it wins external and away from all the computer parts.
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There's a lot less electronic noise and you want to keep noise up because noise is going directly relate to it for an image in this case.
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Actually, though, the USB sound card that I have has more noise on it than the sound card in my laptop.
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So I'm just using the one built into my laptop.
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You also need a piece of software.
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There's tons of software that we're doing because we do this like a decade ago.
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It's very popular. It's not as popular now, but it's all the salads are digital.
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But we can still pick up these ones.
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I'm using what's called APT decoder and APT stands for automatic picture transmission, which is what the lowest satellites prefer to when they're sending images down.
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These runs on Windows.
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And I'm going to go ahead and open that.
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Just as a moment, I need to set up my scanner.
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Because we're picking up on the node 17, we're going to set this to the correct frequency.
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So go ahead and monitor.
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Now, if you're using a radio scanner, you want to make sure that you turn this grouch all the way down to off.
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So that you just get a whole bunch of white noise coming out.
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Because you don't want to, the signal's going to be very weak all the time.
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You don't want the scanner clipping that off or anything.
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I'm going to go ahead and bring up a APT decoder.
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Now, there's some software things that you need to do because you want to get it set up just right.
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Now, I'm not going to include all the software setup that you need to do because no one's going to listen to this and take notes.
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So I whisper, you know, software details.
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But if you want to go to my blog at drakenewis.com, you just find the post on satellite imaging.
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It's probably the most recent one depending on when you listen to this.
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I'll have all these software instructions in there.
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It's not that many, but you just want to get set up with your location and make it out of process and out of recording things.
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Okay.
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I also have this new voice here.
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So you can actually hear what's going on.
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Let's go ahead and get an update in just a couple of moments.
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All right. So what's going to happen to satellite is going to be coming into range.
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That's been very fainted first.
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And then it's going to even here like this take talk or the siren tone depending on where you are.
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And the computer, because it was my location, it knows where the satellite is.
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It's going to automatically start recording the tones.
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It's not that, yeah.
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And because my configuration is going to also automatically start processing the image.
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I'm going to edit this part a lot because the pen has this going to be like eight minutes and you don't want to submit eight minutes of siren noises.
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But here we go.
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Now recording from 017.
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All right.
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So what it just did is it opened the screen.
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I can now see lines going across like scan lines as it decodes the information.
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It's very grainy right now.
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It's going to sharpen up in a little bit.
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So it's pretty loud.
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I'm going to jump straight to that part.
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I'm going to raise the volume so that you can hear what the satellite sounds like.
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Okay. This noise.
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This is the noise of the actual satellite out of your room talking over.
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But when you're really getting a good image, you're going to be hearing this take talk noise.
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Very distinctive take talk noise.
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Otherwise, we're just going to hear this kind of tracking noise.
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Say something.
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Actually, if you don't have the ability to do this, go to my website and look at the waveforms that I have.
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But it makes kind of a cool pattern just because all the signals and you can see the different noise and things.
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It's kind of cool.
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017.
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Now we're sitting.
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Has to meet a boss of signal in two minutes in 49 seconds.
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All right.
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The satellite's moving away and we're kind of losing the signal now.
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Now we got a pretty decent picture.
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I'm going to go ahead and put this up on my website.
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What you see in the image is mostly black and green.
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You know, it starts getting greener and brighter and brighter.
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And you start seeing an image with lines going through.
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And you get pretty clear image for a while.
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And then it drops away.
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It's more noise picks up.
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So I'm not using the most ideal antenna.
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But also if you go into the settings and I'll have notes on this.
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You can do things like look at the space craft type and look at the path analyzer and path analyzer.
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It's going to connect the asthma and elevation to the level of noise that you have.
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And you can see kind of this cool graph.
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I love graphs.
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How much noise you're getting when you can tune your antenna and stuff.
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You want to make it a really great hobby in this.
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There's plenty to do here for relatively low cost.
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As long as you want to dedicate a tiny boat in your equipment and stuff.
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So do you have any questions or comments?
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Especially contact me if you have a like if you've gotten your own pictures.
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Because I just love kind of geeking out and walking this pictures and stuff.
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So if you manage to do this on your own.
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Some of your results will think I'll post them online if you want to.
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But I'm breaking news at gmail.com or my blog has comments that no one ever uses.
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Because I never check them.
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And all right.
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It's fate to the.
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Yeah.
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That's real.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R.
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sponsored by Carol.net.
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So head on over to C.A.R.O. dot N.C.
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and see all of the things.
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Thank you.
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