In the Linux world you can use PulseAudio to transport soundcard audio from
a remote RPi and radio over the net to a local desktop running WSJT-X. I
do this. It works fine provided that the latency is not too large.
On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 11:03 AM Alex, VE3NEA via wsjt-devel <
wsjt-devel@lists
If you have an Android phone or tablet, this app monitors WSJT-X via your
home WiFi. That is, it monitors the copy of WSJT-X running on your home
computer.
It has customizable alerts, filters, sorting, etc.
It received a nice review in QST Feb 2021, Eclectic Tech column.
https://play.google.com
Hi Aaron,
If you have an Android phone or tablet I have an app which does everything
you ask for and more. If I may be allowed a bit of promotion, it will
provide audible alerts by country, callsign (including by callsign prefix),
continent, your callsign, etc. You can also configure it to not a
I don't use N1MM logging but GridTracker has a feature that can forwards
UDP packets to other programs. It's not bidirectional. Many users of my
Android app (WSJT-X Monitor) use this feature.
Another alternative is a simple Python script. Contact me directly if I
can help.
Thomas Reynolds
O
Hi Joe,
I'd like to echo my appreciation for your significant contribution to
Amateur Radio. To your questions:
- I have built WSJT-X on Ubuntu for every 2.x.x version
- I'm a retired wireless engineer, primarily in development of embedded
Linux and real-time control systems. I've also publish
In wspr2.f90 there is likely a line above line 68 that looks like this:
integer iclock(12)
Try changing it to:
integer iclock(33)
I haven't been paying attention to this thread but if you're trying to
build wspr0 I can tell you that it is not really great at decoding WSPR.
WSJT-X (in WSP