My first was a Commodore VIC-20, after having been introduced to the Apple
][ and HP 85, neither of which I could afford ;)
--
finger painting on glass is an inexact art - apologies for any errors in
this scra^Hibble
()/)/)() ..ASCII for Onno..
On Tue, 2 Nov 2021, 10:44 Nate Bargmann, wrote:
>
Am Mon, 1 Nov 2021 22:36:08 +0100
schrieb Christoph Berg :
> Re: Thomas Beierlein
> > Am Fri, 29 Oct 2021 22:40:10 +0200
> > schrieb Christoph Berg :
...
> > >
> > > \stop_morse was simply not implemented in rigctld yet, but the
> > > patch has already been merged:
> > >
> > > https://github.com
* On 2021 01 Nov 18:35 -0500, Onno VK6FLAB wrote:
> As for the unhealthy obsession, I've been at this since the 6502 :-)
> Amateur Radio was supposed to be a way to do technical stuff away from
> computing. Little did I know a decade ago that the two are on an
> increasingly narrowing road on the
Hi Nate,
Thanks for the welcome! The "extra sauce" that cwdaemon provided was a way
to extract the messages being sent by tlf. To be clear, when you configure
a key in tlf to send out their callsign and your RST, the string that gets
sent to cwdaemon is the exact text entered by the operator, so y
Re: Thomas Beierlein
> Am Fri, 29 Oct 2021 22:40:10 +0200
> schrieb Christoph Berg :
>
> > Re: To tlf-devel@nongnu.org
> > > In fact aborting the message does work, but rigctld isn't properly
> > > forwarding the request through for the IC-7610 here.
> >
> > \stop_morse was simply not implement
Hi Zoli, Hi Lukasz,
how about adding it to the FAQ?
73, de Tom
Am Mon, 1 Nov 2021 08:11:48 +0100
schrieb Csahok Zoltan :
> Hi Lukasz,
>
> Even though Tlf can be started without rig control but some of its
> functionality will be limited as you have exprienced it.
> To overcome this you can use
Hi Lukasz,
Even though Tlf can be started without rig control but some of its
functionality will be limited as you have exprienced it.
To overcome this you can use rigctld in dummy mode.
Here is how:
1) start rigctld for Dummy radio (ignore the warnings)
$ rigctld -m 1 &
2) check i