[{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/2600mhz/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"2600MHz","type":"tags"},{"content":"As part of the VodafoneThree merger there has been a large shake-up to the UK\u0026rsquo;s mobile network operator\u0026rsquo;s spectrum holdings.\nIn October, I discussed Vodafone retuning their B32 L-Band spectrum to allow for O2 to use it. One of the other bands that is seeing a large change is Band 38.\nBand 38 (2600MHz TDD) sits in the 50MHz duplex gap (2570MHz-2620MHz) between its FDD counterpart, band 7 (2500MHz-2570MHz uplink, 2620MHz-2690MHz downlink) 1 2.\nStarting 2025/08/01, the license for Vodafone\u0026rsquo;s allocation will be jointly licensed for use by VodafoneThree and VMO2 (Telefonica UK Limited); with VMO2 exclusively licensing this block from 2026/09/30 3 4.\nB38 Historical Allocation # The spectrum was initially auctioned in 2012 alongside the 800MHz and 2600MHz FDD bands.\nThe licenses in the UK were originally allocated as follows 5:\n2570MHz - 2595MHz -\u0026gt; EE (via BT subsidiary \u0026ldquo;Niche Spectrum Ventures Limited\u0026rdquo;) 2595MHz - 2620MHz -\u0026gt; Vodafone UK The licenses have limitations on the frame structure that can be used. 6\nEach allocation also has a 5MHz block that is limited in power compared to the rest of the allocation, this acts as a guard band to the surrounding FDD spectrum.\nIn October 2020, O2 purchased EE\u0026rsquo;s 25MHz license to use the spectrum at 2595MHz - 2620MHz 7. To my knowledge, EE had not previously deployed this spectrum on their public network.\nCurrent B38 Deployment # The initial deployment of band 38 was in Northern Ireland 8. This region of the UK continues to have the largest deployment of this spectrum by far (assumption based on CellMapper trails). It makes sense that O2 would choose to deploy the spectrum here first as they do not have a license to use their 2300MHz holdings and so use 2600MHz TDD as a capacity addition.\nDeployments in the UK mainland have come in the form of Nokia Flexi Zone small cells. The band 38 models look identical to existing band 3 small cells which are a common sight on London street furniture.\nTwo O2 Nokia Flexi Zones on a lamp-post in Central London. One for L18, one for L26 TDD. In the top right corner of the unit a GPS antenna can be seen slightly (picture from November 2025) Recently, a Vodafone host deployment of the O2 B38 was spotted in Bristol. The site also has B38 for Vodafone, but in time this will be switched off.\nImage of Vodafone Ericsson Host site in Bristol City Centre that is broadcasting O2 and Vodafone B38 (picture taken October 2025) VodafoneThree Merger # As a result of the VodafoneThree merger, the operator has also been able to acquire Vodafone\u0026rsquo;s previously rarely deployed 25MHz holding.\nVodafone regularly used B38 as a capacity addition at major events such as Winter Wonderland9, Reading Festival \u0026amp; Glastonbury.\nVodafone most recently deployed at least 9 sectors of it at Winter Wonderland 2025! Presumably this will be the last temporary deployment we see of it from Vodafone. Temporary sites at Winter Wonderland 2025, Vodafone temp on the left, EE \u0026amp; O2 site on the right (picture from 2025). They also had permanent deployments of B38 in major cities such as Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, London \u0026amp; Manchester - however these deployments would be limited to a handful of sites.\nFor example, in Cardiff, there were two sites that received band 38 around 2018/19, the site that served the main university campus, and the site serving the principality stadium. Both sites have now been swapped to Ericsson and have lost their band 38 at the same time.\nUnwound Vodafone and O2 site in Cardiff before the Huawei B38 was removed (picture from 2023). NSG Screenshot of Vodafone B38 testing done in Bristol City Centre. Future Deployments # O2 are clearly set to become the mid-band TDD king, with 40MHz in 2300MHz already widely deployed, and 40MHz 2600MHz taking off.\nThe most recent deployment of B38 by O2 has been in the form of their Nokia \u0026ldquo;giga-site\u0026rdquo;10 at Paddington Basin, which had 40MHz n38 alongside 80MHz n78. Which when I tested it using a 5G NSA SIM didn\u0026rsquo;t result in gigabit speeds, but it was still the fastest O2 performance I\u0026rsquo;ve personally experienced.\nThere have also been sightings of dual-band n38 and n78 AAUs in O2 Ericsson regions 11 showing this type of deployment will not be limited to a specific vendor region.\nIn terms of existing deployments expansion of O2 L26 TDD deployment from a single 20MHz carrier to two 20MHz carriers in Northern Ireland should be a quick-win for O2, since the Ericsson ERS 4418 units are capable enough 12.\nRegarding O2\u0026rsquo;s small cell deployment, the Nokia Flexi Zone FWHW\u0026rsquo;s that O2 have deployed only support 10, 15 and 20MHz bandwidth operation 13 and so won\u0026rsquo;t see any uplift from the new spectrum acquisition. O2\u0026rsquo;s Ericsson small cell deployments use L18+n78 14, so these small cells likely won\u0026rsquo;t see any changes either.\nSummary of 2600MHz TDD over time # Initial spectrum auction results (March 2013):\n2570MHz - 2595MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by EE 2595MHz - 2620MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Vodafone UK EE trades their 25MHz block to O2 (November 2020):\n2570MHz - 2595MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by VMO2 2595MHz - 2620MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Vodafone UK VodafoneThree merger temporary license (August 2025):\n2570MHz - 2595MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by VMO2 2595MHz - 2620MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Vodafone UK \u0026amp; VMO2 O2 will license the entire band from 2026-09-30:\n2570MHz - 2595MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by VMO2 2595MHz - 2620MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by VMO2 Maybe I will make diagrams of these in the future\u0026hellip;\nReferences # https://www.sqimway.com/lte_band.php\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.sqimway.com/nr_band.php\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.ofcom.org.uk/spectrum/frequencies/trades\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2025/06/o2-confirms-uk-mobile-boost-as-78-8mhz-of-spectrum-acquired-from-vodafone.html\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.ofcom.org.uk/siteassets/resources/documents/spectrum/spectrum-information/4g-final-results.pdf?v=334392\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.ofcom.org.uk/siteassets/resources/documents/manage-your-licence/mobile-wireless-and-broadband/2.3-3.4-ghz/sa-2.6-licence-telefonica-1238565.pdf?v=325449 (See page 8 for Frame Structure)\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://telecomlead.com/telecom-services/ee-to-trade-25-mhz-of-spectrum-in-2-6-ghz-band-to-telefonica-97202\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmCT5CcS9GE\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://pedroc.co.uk/content/vodafone-o2-temporary-sites-winter-wonderland-hyde-park-2018\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://news.virginmediao2.co.uk/virgin-media-o2-set-to-boost-mobile-connectivity-across-the-uk-with-first-of-its-kind-giga-site-switch-on-and-newly-acquired-spectrum/\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWCloiPGgO8\u0026t=8m46s (3m24s and 8m46s relevant)\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.scribd.com/document/583680409/4418-Radio-Description\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.scribd.com/document/725660704/Flexi-Zone-Micro-BTS-Product-Description?v=0.755 (page 113)\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\nhttps://www.linkedin.com/posts/peter-clarke-95016b172_standout-in-small-cell-5g-standalone-5g-activity-7255529937510584323-vfla\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\n","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/posts/2026-01-vmo2-band-38/","section":"Posts","summary":"Band 38 has never been widely deployed in the UK outside of high capacity Vodafone sites, could that be about to change?","title":"Band 38 to finally see wide-scale deployment","type":"posts"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/merger/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Merger","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/o2/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"O2","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/posts/","section":"Posts","summary":"","title":"Posts","type":"posts"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Tags","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/three/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Three","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"2 January 2026","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/vodafone/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Vodafone","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"10 December 2025","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/android/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Android","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"10 December 2025","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/nsg/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Nsg","type":"tags"},{"content":"⚠️ Disclaimer: This entire article is written for educational purposes only, rooting your device will void its warranty. I am not responsible if you bootloop (get it?) your device!\nThe LoopDL is a £1 £95 speaker/android phone (?) which runs a MediaTek MT6877V SoC. The device runs a very stock Android OS with MediaTek drivers added in alongside the custom Loop apps (see further down).\nIf you have purchased this device, I feel it is important for you to be aware of the potential privacy implications. The Loop app has access to the camera, microphone, nearby devices and location (all the time), you cannot change these settings or disable the app without root. The device seems to re-activate location services within a few minutes of them being disabled (this stops happening when the Loop app is disabled). I am not saying it is spying on anyone, to me, it just seems like an overly permissive set of app permissions for an app which is used to: active the device, enable a Wi-Fi hotspot and change the music equaliser settings.\nImage of Loop app location permission screen with options greyed out Rooting Introduction # The LoopDL does not have any publicly downloadable OTA images, so the rooting process requires a few more steps than your traditional Android handset. We will need to extract the boot partition files to create a boot image that magisk can patch. Luckily the device is bootloader unlocked and has DSU support which makes rooting possible.\nIt\u0026rsquo;s important to note that this device has two fastboot modes: fastboot and fastbootd. You will know you are in fastbootd as the screen will show \u0026ldquo;fastbootd\u0026rdquo; in red at the top, whereas fastboot mode only has the backlight enabled.\nImage of fastbootd mode Several people I know have had issues running certain fastboot commands in fastbootd mode, so try switching between them if you are having issues. If you find yourself in recovery mode or similar, you can use the volume buttons to navigate yourself out.\nImage of loop in recovery mode Rooting Process # Useful links:\nSource for GSI boot image extraction steps: https://gist.github.com/gitclone-url/a1f693b64d8f8701ec24477a2ccaab87\nDSU-Sideloader: https://github.com/VegaBobo/DSU-Sideloader\nGSI Images: https://github.com/TrebleDroid/treble_experimentations/releases\nMagisk Releases: https://github.com/topjohnwu/Magisk/releases\n# Reboot device to bootloader adb reboot bootloader # Check that device is showing up in fastboot list fastboot devices # Unlock bootloader (will factory reset device) fastboot oem unlock fastboot reboot Setup the loop offline when prompted (its quicker).\nEnable developer options in settings (tapping by tapping the build number over 9000 times).\nInstall DSU-Sideloader and download a GSI image with root access.\nSince the loop comes with Android 15, I used the system-td-arm64-ab-vanilla.img.xz image to reduce the chance something would go wrong. If you choose to download the image on your computer, use adb push system-td-arm64-ab-vanilla.img.xz /sdcard/Documents/ to push the image to the loop.\nSet the userdata to be 3GB and follow the DSU sideloader instructions, eventually a notification telling you that you can reboot the device will appear.\nImage of DSU Sideloader running on Loop unit Once rebooted into the GSI image, you will have root shell access, meaning that we can now create a boot image.\nPull the following partitions via adb shell:\nsu mkdir -p /sdcard/img/ for PARTITION in \u0026#34;init_boot_a\u0026#34; \u0026#34;init_boot_b\u0026#34; \u0026#34;boot_a\u0026#34; \u0026#34;boot_b\u0026#34; \u0026#34;vendor_boot_a\u0026#34; \u0026#34;vendor_boot_b\u0026#34;; do BLOCK=$(find /dev/block \\( -type b -o -type c -o -type l \\) -iname \u0026#34;$PARTITION\u0026#34; -print -quit 2\u0026gt;/dev/null) if [ -n \u0026#34;$BLOCK\u0026#34; ]; then echo \u0026#34;$PARTITION\u0026#34; = $(readlink -f \u0026#34;$BLOCK\u0026#34;) dd if=\u0026#34;$BLOCK\u0026#34; of=\u0026#34;/sdcard/img/$PARTITION.img\u0026#34; fi done Take note of the current active slot (this will be the one you need to patch): getprop ro.boot.slot_suffix\nInstall the Magisk APK that you downloaded from GitHub: adb install Magisk-v30.6.apk\nPatch the init_boot_b (or whichever is your active slot) using Magisk.\nIf you can\u0026rsquo;t find the img folder, check the commands ran correctly earlier\nPull the image via adb: adb pull /sdcard/Download/magisk_patched-30600_XXXXX.img\nYou should also back up the boot partition files we created in the event something goes wrong: adb pull /sdcard/img/\nNow you can reboot out of GSI mode (back to the LoopDL Android distribution).\nThen you can reboot to fastboot mode and flash the new init_boot image you just created.\nfastboot flash init_boot_b magisk_patched-30600_XXXXX.img fastboot reboot Now you should have root! (once Magisk has completed the setup)\nAnd finally, we can run NSG, on our 5G speaker - as God intended.\nDigging deeper\u0026hellip; # NSG\u0026rsquo;s band-locking menu shows the device is only capable of 4G on bands 1, 3, 8, 28, 38, 40 and 41. As well as 5G on n1, n3, n8, n28, n38, n40, n41, n77 and n78. The device doesn\u0026rsquo;t seem to have 2G or 3G available (need to do more digging).\nSince we now have root, we can also access privileged activities in the MediaTek apps, such as the \u0026ldquo;Band Mode\u0026rdquo; activity which allows for band locking. Screenshot of MediaTek Engineering Mode Band Selection activity Pulling the CA combinations from the UE capability response, we can see it\u0026rsquo;s pretty lacklustre:\nhttps://uecapability.smartphonecombo.it/view/multi/?id=a2452d9e-420f-4993-a033-bba13f931578 https://uecapability.smartphonecombo.it/view/multi/?id=0f069583-473e-48a2-97b7-1f2038547844 The Loop supports EVS calls, albeit at a weird bit-rate of 19.85Kbps which I\u0026rsquo;ve not previously seen, but is in the 3gpp spec (TS 126 441 v12.0.0).\nScreenshot of NSG showing EVS-SWB/19.85kbps call between two loop devices Pre-installed Apps # What does this thing have pre-installed on it?\ntheloop:/ # pm list packages | grep -Ev \u0026#39;android|google|mediatek\u0026#39; package:co.rainx.loop.setup package:co.rainx.loop.launcher package:com.weibu.factorytest package:com.debug.loggerui package:vendor.rainx.setupwizard.overlay package:com.pri.autotest package:com.trustonic.teeservice The three apps of interest are: co.rainx.loop.launcher, co.rainx.loop.setup and vendor.rainx.setupwizard.overlay.\nI disabled them using the package manager, as I don\u0026rsquo;t want this thing phoning home. I also don\u0026rsquo;t like how the app has camera and microphone permission but that\u0026rsquo;s a separate issue.\npm disable co.rainx.loop.launcher pm disable co.rainx.loop.setup pm disable vendor.rainx.setupwizard.overlay The APKs for these apps can be easily backed up using:\npm path $PACKAGE_ID and then using adb pull to fetch the path that is returned.\n5G eSIMs # The Loop has 2 eSIMs, one seems to be for bootstrapping during setup, then once you activate the product that eSIM is disabled and a new Gamma Communications eSIM is activated on the device.\nThis Gamma SIM uses Three UK (PLMN 23420) and doesn\u0026rsquo;t seem to allow roaming onto any other network.\n£25/mo for unlimited data on Three is not a good deal, but I suppose they have to make a bit of money back on the units some how. The razer and blades business model comes to mind here.\nCredits # Thank you to Eva for sharing some images of her loop\u0026rsquo;s recovery screen :)\n","date":"10 December 2025","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/posts/2025-12-loop-speaker/","section":"Posts","summary":"Answering life\u0026rsquo;s important questions, like: can I run Network Signal Guru on my speaker?","title":"Rooting a 5G speaker I got for £1","type":"posts"},{"content":"For those who have been keeping up with spectrum licensing in the UK, you will know that in August 2025, several license changes occurred1.\nPrior to 01/08/2025:\n1452MHz - 1472MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Vodafone 1472MHz - 1492MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Three Now:\n1452MHz - 1472MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by VMO2 \u0026amp; Vodafone 1472MHz - 1492MHz -\u0026gt; Licensed by Vodafone \u0026amp; Three With a view that from September 2027, the lower chunk (1452-1472) will be licensed by VMO2 exclusively.\nSo why am I mentioning all this?\nThis week I noticed that Vodafone have started using what was previously Three\u0026rsquo;s allocation of B32 on some sites in Cardiff.\nFor instance, a Q4 2024 Ericsson swap eNB 22402 is now broadcasting EARFCN 10220, previously the site was broadcasting EARFCN 10020.\nMeanwhile, more recent vendor swaps, such as eNB 23239 are still using Vodafone\u0026rsquo;s old EARFCN 10020, probably due to an old config when the site was commissioned. I imagine this will be corrected in the next few weeks.\nThree UK sites in the area are still using EARFCN 10220 - which is causing the channel quality to be quite poor for the Vodafone sites that have been re-tuned, as can be seen in my screenshot. As the merger progresses, small issues like this will be ironed out.\nNow all that is left to do is to keep an eye out for O2 B32!\nExample of Vodafone site pre-retune, broadcasting EARFCN 10020 Vodafone site post-retune, broadcasting EARFCN 10220 References # https://www.ofcom.org.uk/spectrum/frequencies/trades\u0026#160;\u0026#x21a9;\u0026#xfe0e;\n","date":"15 October 2025","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/posts/2025-10-vodafone-three-b32-retune/","section":"Posts","summary":"The Vodafone \u0026amp; Three UK merger is quickly resulting in changes to spectrum that cell sites are broadcasting.","title":"VodafoneThree start 1400MHz L-Band retune","type":"posts"},{"content":"","date":"12 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/azure/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Azure","type":"tags"},{"content":"I decided that I wanted to have a better understanding of Azure Pipelines, and what better way to do that than to create a small but useful extension!\nYou can get the extension here: Azure DevOps Marketplace\nUpdate from Jan 2026: My current employer does not use Azure Pipelines and so I won\u0026rsquo;t be maintaining this extension going forwards\nunderrobyn/dependabot-fail-task Fail an Azure Pipeline based on open Dependabot alerts TypeScript 1 0 ","date":"12 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/projects/dependabot-fail-task/","section":"projects","summary":"Fail a pipeline based on open Dependabot alerts","title":"dependabot-fail-task","type":"projects"},{"content":"","date":"12 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/devops/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Devops","type":"tags"},{"content":"I\u0026rsquo;ve finally managed to put some time aside for reviving my old projects and they\u0026rsquo;re going to be coming live here!\nAs well as blog posts and other things :)\n","date":"12 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/posts/hello/","section":"Posts","summary":"a new home for robyn\u0026rsquo;s projects.","title":"Hello robyn.zip!","type":"posts"},{"content":"","date":"12 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/personal/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Personal","type":"tags"},{"content":"Peter hosts a copy of the 4G speed calculator here: 4G Speed Calculator - pedroc.co.uk\nunderrobyn/4g-speed 4G Theoretical Speed Calculator | FDD \u0026amp; TDD Support JavaScript 33 15 When creating the calculator, I found this resource very helpful: KeySight Technologies - LTE Physical Layer Overview\n","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/projects/4g-lte-speed-calculator/","section":"projects","summary":"Tool to calculate the maxiumum theoretical throughput of 4G LTE","title":"4G speed calculator","type":"projects"},{"content":"Peter hosts a copy of the 5G speed calculator here: 5G Speed Calculator - pedroc.co.uk\nunderrobyn/5g-speed 5G Speed Calculator - Support for all of the latest FDD, TDD, SDL \u0026amp; SUL NR bands JavaScript 19 6 When creating the calculator, I found this resource very helpful: KeySight Technologies - Understanding the 5G NR Physical Layer\n","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/projects/5g-nr-speed-calculator/","section":"projects","summary":"Tool to calculate the maxiumum theoretical throughput of 5G-NR","title":"5G speed calculator","type":"projects"},{"content":"My personal site where I post about telecoms, cyber-security, and anything else I find interesting.\nNone of the content on this website is AI generated.\nAll content expressed on this site is my opinion, and not the position of my employer.\nIf you have found an error in any of my content, please contact me on telegram.\n","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/about/","section":"robyn.zip","summary":"The about page","title":"about robyn.zip","type":"page"},{"content":"\u0026ldquo;Mappr\u0026rdquo; was a combination of 2 applications, \u0026ldquo;CellSort\u0026rdquo; and \u0026ldquo;MLS-Mapper\u0026rdquo;.\nCellSort History # CellSort was originally written in PHP back in 2016/17 and was awfully slow - meaning it took about 20 minutes to pull all the cell IDs out of the MLS dataset with MCC 234 and calculate eNB / Sector IDs.\nIn 2020, I re-wrote the CellSort application in Java, renamed to \u0026ldquo;jcellsort\u0026rdquo; which was able to get the parsing time down, however I wasn\u0026rsquo;t the best Java dev at the time and so found it more difficult to maintain.\nThat bring us to the present day, with \u0026ldquo;PyCellSort\u0026rdquo; being the current implementation of CellSort. It is the fastest implementation yet, however, being written in 2021, is sorely in need of an update as my Python skills have come a long way since then.\nWeb-map History # Mappr used to reside on mappr.uk, however due to pressures from uni and work, I stopped maintaining it.\nDue to Mozilla Location Services shutting down, Mappr will likely not return. However I may create a historical version with the final MLS dump (not planned right now).\nRIP MLS 2013 - 2024\nRepositories # underrobyn/pycellsort MLS + OpenCellID CSV parser for Mappr Python 0 0 underrobyn/mappr2 JavaScript 0 0 ","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/projects/mappr-v2/","section":"projects","summary":"Using the MLS dataset for fun","title":"Mappr2","type":"projects"},{"content":"","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/meta/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Meta","type":"tags"},{"content":"","date":"11 February 2024","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/telecoms/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Telecoms","type":"tags"},{"content":"Please enjoy my ramblings :)\n","date":"14 August 2023","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/","section":"robyn.zip","summary":"This is my first post on my site","title":"robyn.zip","type":"page"},{"content":"","date":"14 August 2023","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/tags/space/","section":"Tags","summary":"","title":"Space","type":"tags"},{"content":"","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/categories/","section":"Categories","summary":"","title":"Categories","type":"categories"},{"content":"A list of all my projects and where to find them.\n","externalUrl":null,"permalink":"/projects/","section":"projects","summary":"List of projects","title":"projects","type":"projects"}]