STAEDT is a versatile, powerful program for simulation of data signals and processes on personal computers. Engineers and students use it for analysis and evaluation of communications systems. This package includes the complete STAEDT software on disk, plus a reference manual,
Simulation Techniques: The STAEDT Program. A companion textbook,
Simulation Techniques: Models of Communication Signals and Processes, explains the principles of simulation of signal transmission.
A simulation with STAEDT is conducted as follows:
- A user identifies STAEDT commands for each block of a system to be simulated. The STAEDT library contains over 100 modular commands that implement signal processes such as filters, modulators, data sources, noise generators, nonlinear amplifiers, detectors, error counters, correlators, Fourier transforms, and many more elements
- With the aid of STAEDT 's menus, the user prepares a command list to model the communications link
- The user specifies parameters for each command; parameters define the characteristics of each of the blocks in the link
- A simulation engine in STAEDT executes the command list; a simulated signal is passed through each of the commands just as an actual signal passes through a physical communications link
- Output to screen, file, or printer consists of waveforms, spectra, BER estimates or other data as specified in the command list
The reference manual provides instructions for installation of STAEDT , rules for preparing command lists, methods of using the menus, complete details on each command, and extensive examples (additionally furnished as sample command lists on the disk).
Computer requirements:
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Personal computer, with CD drive, running Microsoft Windows 95/98/ME or NT4/2000/XP/Vista
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Adobe Acrobat Reader (for PDF reference manual)
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(Optional) Microsoft Visual Basic 6, for preparing new, user-written commands. Not needed for ordinary operations