Thursday, April 30, 2026

SDR Top 10 Has Fallen: Meet something new....

 

At the HOPE 16 conference back in August 2025, my presentation focused on the most popular projects based on key search terms such as "SDR", "Software Defined Radio", "Amateur Radio" and "Ham Radio".   

My theory was to look at how many stars were voted on by the GitHub community per project and compare against how long the project has been around in order to create a velocity score, simply by dividing stars by number of days old the project is.  

The idea was that the faster a project could generate the most stars would mean that it captured more interest or maintained that over time and thus, would be very important to pay attention to these projects. 

Here are the slides, charts and data to back up the presentation if you missed it. I analyzed the top 10 most popular for each search term for a total of 40 projects overall. Below is an example of one of my "velocity" charts enabled by the star history site which can be used for exactly what I needed.


I really wanted to wait a full year before seeing if there were major changes to the top projects, so here is a short update to start May 2026 off since too many exciting things are happening. I will compare again just before HOPE 26 at the New Yorker Hotel now less than 90 days away.

Changes:  SDR

First up, lets look at the "SDR" top 10 from last year and how they compare to now. I bolded out four worth talking about below.

Last year, GQRX which is one of the longest maintained "SDR" projects was the 9th most starred project followed by SDRangel as 10th most popular. Less than a year later, GQRX has dropped to 13th most popular and SDRangel is now 11th most popular. 

In March, SDRangel released version 7.24.0 which now includes Meshtastic functionality,  which is clear evolution from the earlier Chirp Chat function designed to support LoRa based messaging.  This is nice because if you have a HackRF, ADLAM Pluto, Lime SDR or most other transmit capable SDR, you can use it as a mesh device with limited capabilities along with its many (many) other useful features.

Not much of anything has changed in the last year however with GQRX since its intent was always to be a simple and easy to use radio application for those getting started with SDR.

Shadowbroker

What is really amazing are the two new entries to the top ten most starred SDR projects less than a year later from my original analysis.  

Shadowbroker is defined as "Open-source intelligence for the global theater. Track everything from the corporate/private jets of the wealthy, and spy satellites, to seismic events in one unified interface. The knowledge is available to all but rarely aggregated in the open, until now." This project is now the 6th most popular as voted on by the community all time. 

Much of what Shadowbroker offers is functionality built into SDRangel actually, but Shadowbroker is meant to be an OSINT tool where SDRangel is more of a SIGINT tool, with built in OSINT functionality. 

It is amazing how fast Shadowbroker has obtained 5,500 stars since its first release which was only in March 2026.  From Shadowbroker's repository, here is a video showing its capability. 


A blend of true coding plus some level of "AI" vibe coding was used to come up with this and is an amazing achievement that not many are talking about Shadowbroker across the wider interwebs.  Maybe that will change soon. I sure hope so. 

It is really worth explaining why Shadowbroker is unique.  While SDRangel allows the user to show many types of location based signals like aircraft, balloons, boats, spacecraft, amateur radio people and more on a map all at the same time from directly connected SDR's, or those over a network,  SDRangel also allows some of what is received to also feed into other systems.

Shadowbroker is not just about radio signals. Its about complex situational awareness, so this is a really cool project for looking at many types of information. If you ever dreamed about becoming the "guy in the chair" this project helps you get pretty close to that, just like in the movies!.

Ground Station

Having a look at the now 9th most popular repository simply called ground-station, this project began life in October 2025 and has already gained 4,200 stars.  This is also very impressive as it touts being  a full-featured, open-source software solution for satellite tracking and radio communication. 

Designed for amateur radio operators, satellite enthusiasts, and researchers, it provides a comprehensive and easy-to-use platform for monitoring spacecraft, controlling radio equipment, and receiving live radio signals from satellites. This project was built with the help of Claude Code and Codex.



It is clear what this project is and how it was made.  Again, much of this functionality is built in to SDRangel, but can be overwhelming to some users and the new ground station project seems really nicely done.  A full understanding of its functionality can be found on the project page, which is now coming close to its hundredth release yet is still on up to version 0.4.4.  

Typically, when a project hits the v1 milestone, its considered much more mature, so there is certainly a lot more expected to happen with ground station.

Software Defined Radio

Comparing the top 10 from last year until now,  the same are all present with a few changing places in total stars, but otherwise nothing else is unique.  Clearly if you want to experiment with SDR,  its worth searching both ways, but the long form of "software defined radio" is not where things are happening compared to "SDR".

Ham Radio

There is one change in the top ten thanks to a project called HamDashboard which now would rank as 9th most popular and surprisingly helped knock down the LoRaHam project down to the eleventh spot. While the LoRaHam project is managed by the pretty famous Travis Goodspeed, here is a clear example that when a project sees no updates, it often becomes less popular. 

But, the work of Travis on areas like hacking the TYT MD-380 which helped make DMR very popular and his other projects found on his Git repository demonstrate that its worth keeping an eye on anything he is doing.  

HamDashboard by VA3HDL started three years ago, but has seen more work in the last few months. The focus is to provide a simple, browser-based ham radio dashboard that displays images, maps, web pages, and feeds in a configurable grid. It is lightweight, easy to host, and suitable for use on a local computer, Raspberry Pi, or a static host such as GitHub Pages or Cloudflare Pages. 

With projects like HamClock undergoing changes, it seems HamDashboard is becoming more popular and here is the proof to show that.  While very different than what Shadowbroker does, it seems that a need to visualize many data sources is an area that many radio hobbyists are very interested in. 


Amateur Radio

The top ten most "starred" projects found by using the "amateur radio" key term are also almost the same as a year ago.  A few projects changed total rankings, but there is a new number nine present via the APRS D project, which has been around since 2021, but only recently become more popular. 

Many changes within MKISS and AX.25 are starting to rattle thanks to the recent news about certain things being dropped from the Linux kernel but that is out of scope for this update, but still was worth a quick mention.

APRS which has been covered here at length continues to be a misunderstood or narrowly conceptualized area within communications, so its amazing that this project is one of the more popular voted on projects to keep an eye on.  

Pretty much anything related to APRS is worth keeping an eye on actually, so this is a nice place to end this article without diving super deep on this topic.

Summary

It is important to embrace the advances in technology and a great way to do that is to spend some time searching for things on Git.  The value I hope my presentation offers from last year and into this update is to demonstrate theory to fact in order to prove a point on how to track trends and uncover hidden patterns around topical areas worth paying attention to.  

A benefit for those interested in coding is you may find something you can help improve or for those not considered "coders", might find inspiration to leverage artificial intelligence (AI) by way of vibe coding to help create solutions targeted at clear problems, just like Ground Station has done and most likely a few other projects too.

Also worth noting that when it comes to "amateur/ham" radio, there is still not enough excitement in these areas to attract more innovation.  While unfair to compare to "SDR",  this is an area which many in the amateur community should be looking at for what should be next.

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