General Research of Electronics Inc 0713902 Manuel D’Utilisation

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PSR-310 
 
Advanced Handheld Scanning Receiver with Object Oriented User Interface 
 
Owner's Manual 
 
Please read this User's Guide before installing, setting up and using your new product. 
 
 
Table of Contents 
 
will add 
 
 
 
 
Introduction 
 
Welcome to an exciting new world of radio scanning! Recognizing that contemporary scanning receivers 
are too hard to program and use, GRE's engineers conducted extensive research to determine the 
functional requirements for an entirely new scanning receiver user interface. We call this new user interface 
the Object Oriented User Interface (OOUI), and it is based on the premise that, to a hobbyist, a scanner is 
easiest to use if all of the things that can be scanned are handled using common conventions for interaction 
between the user and the radio, at least to the extent that this is possible given that the ”things” that can be 
scanned are different from one another in either subtle or major ways. 
In this new user interface design, we call “things” that can be scanned Scannable Objects. Simply put, a 
Scannable Object is defined as something that can be scanned or monitored. Scannable Objects include 
the following: 
 
. Conventional, non-trunked radio channels 
. Trunked talkgroups used on a trunked radio system 
. Service searches to search for a specific radio service 
. Search ranges with upper and lower limits 
. Spectrum Sweeper setups with band segments that can be enabled or disabled by the user 
 
One of the goals of the Object Oriented User Interface is to make the scanner as easy to use as possible. 
The OOUI does this by treating all Scannable Objects the same in terms of how they are created, edited, 
manipulated and grouped. Once you have learned how to create and store a conventional channel, you 
know most of what you need to know to create a trunking talkgroup, and so on.