Dave (K1WHS), Tree (N6TR), and others -- Shoot, if I had thought a mode like WSJT might not be allowed in VHF/UHF contests, I might not have put all the work into developing it! Contests are one of m
Hoo boy, this certainly has been interesting! As I remember, Dave, K1WHS, only opened this subject by asking whether or not the League considered the mode to be *legal* for contests based on previous
Hi Joe, Gee, I hate to get on these reflectors with such questions, because things just seem to snowball and next thing you know, I have horns coming out of my head, and one big eye in the middle of
A sad example of an "Internet Contest QSO" occured during the January VHF QSO Party on the "144 MHz Prop. Logger." A station out in Colorado solicited a 2 Meter QSO with a station in Kansas. They had
Dave: Since "essentially all WSJT signal detection is done by computer", maybe you should consider recruiting the squirrel to be your WSJT operator in the September VHF contest! :-) 73, Jon N0JK sinc
Hi Jon, I don't think the red squirrel would agree to help me out. I was pretty mean to him while chasing him out of the generator. I most likely hurt his feelings and ruined his self esteem. Good id
Dave -- Many thanks for your follow-up message. I did not take any of your original comments as being unreasonable; it is, indeed, interesting to know what the ARRL might think about the use of a new
I thought Red Squirrel was a form of Linux? Oh, that's Red Hat - SRI. Good Luck in the contest. Don, NL7CO --Original Message-- From: vhfcontesting-admin@contesting.com [mailto:vhfcontesting-admin@co
Personally, I enjoy PSK31, but I greatly doubt that I'm going to use it while roving. But, if fixed stations want to use it between themselves, so be it. 73 - Paul, N6DN To: <vhfcontesting@contesting
No. That is not what this means. What this means is that you can't pick up your telephone during a contest and call you your friend in a grid you need and ask him to get on the air. If you are in th
Dave (K1WHS), Tree (N6TR), and others -- Shoot, if I had thought a mode like WSJT might not be allowed in VHF/UHF contests, I might not have put all the work into developing it! Contests are one of m
Hoo boy, this certainly has been interesting! As I remember, Dave, K1WHS, only opened this subject by asking whether or not the League considered the mode to be *legal* for contests based on previous
Hi Joe, Gee, I hate to get on these reflectors with such questions, because things just seem to snowball and next thing you know, I have horns coming out of my head, and one big eye in the middle of
Dave -- Many thanks for your follow-up message. I did not take any of your original comments as being unreasonable; it is, indeed, interesting to know what the ARRL might think about the use of a new
I thought Red Squirrel was a form of Linux? Oh, that's Red Hat - SRI. Good Luck in the contest. Don, NL7CO --Original Message-- From: vhfcontesting-admin@contesting.com [mailto:vhfcontesting-admin@co
Hi Jon, I don't think the red squirrel would agree to help me out. I was pretty mean to him while chasing him out of the generator. I most likely hurt his feelings and ruined his self esteem. Good id
Personally, I enjoy PSK31, but I greatly doubt that I'm going to use it while roving. But, if fixed stations want to use it between themselves, so be it. 73 - Paul, N6DN To: <vhfcontesting@contesting
A sad example of an "Internet Contest QSO" occured during the January VHF QSO Party on the "144 MHz Prop. Logger." A station out in Colorado solicited a 2 Meter QSO with a station in Kansas. They had
Dave: Since "essentially all WSJT signal detection is done by computer", maybe you should consider recruiting the squirrel to be your WSJT operator in the September VHF contest! :-) 73, Jon N0JK sinc
No. That is not what this means. What this means is that you can't pick up your telephone during a contest and call you your friend in a grid you need and ask him to get on the air. If you are in th