Dave,
You put DXCluster future in perspective. Yes, I agree, This 40 years
old tecnology developed to run over packet radio has no fixing fo
nowadays.
> The only way I can see the existing network going away is to design a new
> system from the ground up that includes strong backbone security, not too
> complicated but secure user identification, and all the other features that
> everyone wants to enable opting in/out of spotting, filters, larger volumes
> of spots, elimination of bottlenecks and loops, must run on various versions
> of windows, linux, mac's, must include telnet, rf, web, and some kind of new
> secure user access for future expansion, must include localized language
> capabilities and built in translation of talk/announce/comments, use the new
> non-ascii url system, accommodate skimmer spots automatically, allow Unicode
> character sets, email and bulletin distribution, emergency disaster
> overrides, etc, etc, etc. And then of course all the user logging and other
> access programs will have to update to handle whatever the authentication
> system is. This is obviously not a simple project... and it won't make the
I'm not a Geek (ah, I'm ham radio anyway), but reading this
requirements for the new network, it looks like something that has
been arround for while: Twitter network.
So, I wonder if we can use a Twitter API to setup a parallel network
to transport DX Spots. It is very well docummentaded and integrated it
to log software won't be hard.
140 caracters is just enough to send a spot, just like it is now.
73, Luc
__
ZY7C Team member
PT7AG (also PY8AZT, PX8C, ZZ8Z)
LABRE, ARRL, Uirapuru DX Club & ADXG Member
__
Prefil: http://www.google.com/profiles/lmoreira
Participe da Lista DXBrasil: dxbrasil+subscribe@googlegroups.com
Website: http://www.dxbrasil.net
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