:13
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Popagation analysis + Linux?
FYI, your clock is a year behind. This message came in dated Jan 27,
1999,
and hence sorted as last of 700 in my mailbox, despite being new. You may
want to consider correcting this . . .
FWIW
I don't think I did any y2k checking on this box and uptime showed
38 days etcsomething got hosed after 12/31 and simply restarting
the KDE panel and KMail corrected the date error
Quite strange as my bash prompt is PS1="[\t][\u@\h:\w]$" and the
clock is staring me in the face every time I'm
like to
have something like that in LINUX, all that I have found out there
is in Windows or DOS...
-Original Message-
From: Mike Werner [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2000 21:07
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Re: Popagation analysis + Linux?
On Wed
But you don't need it for ham work.
Contact V-Soft or RadioSoft...I believe they both support the USGS
30m TED.
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Hast, Chuck wrote:
Ahh but some of us do need to work at those higher resolutions,
particularly with UHF and VHF...
-
James S.
FYI, your clock is a year behind. This message came in dated Jan 27, 1999,
and hence sorted as last of 700 in my mailbox, despite being new. You may
want to consider correcting this . . .
FWIW,
Tim
But you don't need it for ham work.
Contact V-Soft or RadioSoft...I believe they both
That's weird
kg7fu@p133p:~ date
Thu Jan 27 21:18:29 GMT 2000
Restarted the KDE panel and things look a bit better.
BTW I sort by received date...eliminates problems by dyslexic
boneheads like me!
jk
Tim Dawson wrote about Re: Popagation analysis + Linux?:
FYI, your clock is a year
Thats a tough one. I have tried running CAPMAN under dosemu, but I had
problems with the output graphics. Maybe it would run under the latest
dosemu. I guess there may be not too much of a problem with IONCAP
itself; the user interface is the challenge, like with other portings
of software into
Are there any homepages concerning this subject?
Besides getting databases with site information up and running, some
programming experience and a lot of experience with commercially available
planning-tools (in my case Broadcast in VHF/UHF and 1.5 GHz), I don't have
any information concerning
Earlier versions of the HF propagation programs from
http://elbert.its.bldrdoc.gov were also
available for unix but they only seem to support Windows now. I think they
are compiled
fortran.
Richard
hn - G3JAG [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: James S. Kaplan KG7FU [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2000 2:44 AM
Subject: RE: Popagation analysis + Linux?
Thats a tough one. I have tried running CAPMAN under dosemu, but I
had
problems with the output graphics. Maybe it
Unless things have changed significantly, the computing power required
to do *accurate*, MS, Tropo EME predictions is well beyond that of
the average ham and his/her PC.
Interesting idea though, one could guage LOS terrestrial QSO
possibilities by keeping tabs on grids referenced say to an
VOACAP and REC533 (the ITU-R PI.533 model for international HF planning)
are available on the web site as Fortrash Source.
At 04:53 PM 01/26/2000 Wednesday , you wrote:
Earlier versions of the HF propagation programs from
http://elbert.its.bldrdoc.gov were also
available for unix but they only
On Wed, Jan 26, 2000 at 03:15:17PM -0500, Hast, Chuck wrote:
I for one would certainly be interested, we have where I work a
windows based software package that cost about $8k with the
whole 1 second database for the USA, PR and HI. I do not know
if you can use the tiger data base which is
On Wed, 26 Jan 2000, Mike Werner wrote:
You're talking about downloadable topographic information? If so:
http://edc.usgs.gov/doc/edchome/ndcdb/ndcdb.html
The USGS has available a file type called DEM (Digital Elevation Model)
that can be used to generate topo maps. Dad uses 'em all the
]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2000 7:36 PM
Subject: Re: Popagation analysis + Linux?
On Wed, 26 Jan 2000, Mike Werner wrote:
You're talking about downloadable topographic information? If so:
http://edc.usgs.gov/doc/edchome/ndcdb/ndcdb.html
The USGS has available
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