Thank you for the response on list and off list regarding cwdaemon. Between
Kamil and myself we have got alsa working, but it needs more testing at
high speeds.

Last weekend I used my tlf->linhpsdr->HL2 setup for over 150 qsos. It seems
to be working reliably. It is great to not have a mass of cables and do
everything through ethernet ports for CAT, netkeyer etc. As a side note, I
have only enabled this for the Hermes-Lite 2 so far, but it should work
with any protocol 1 OpenHPSDR/Anan SDR. If anyone on list has one and wants
to be a beta tester for this please let me know?

The SDR setup really lends itself well to so2r (and at low cost). I have
been thinking about implementing an OTRSP (https://www.k1xm.org/OTRSP)
listener within linhpsdr. I think I am correct in saying hamlib doesn't
have this OTRSP protocol embedded within?

I have already got the basics in place in linhpsdr for audio in left/right
channel for specific receivers etc. I'm not really proficient enough yet to
make too much use of so2r, but it seems like an interesting challenge, both
in terms of computer programming and operating so this motivates me.

I know that so2sdr exists for linux, but I'm not aware of any other logging
software supporting so2r? I have read through the archives of this list and
seen that with the LAN connection tlf can do pseudo so2r.

I have been looking at the tlf code and pondering over what it would take
to add some basic so2r, single keyboard functionality using the OTRSP
protocol. Shift key would seem a candidate to bind so2r switching. Shift is
used for some things like "+" to switch S&P/CQ and resend last serial is an
_. But does shift plus numbers or letters have a key bind?

The other stumbling point I hit in this mental exercise was the band map.
You would need some sort of intelligence in code for grabbing a bandmap
spot. It could perhaps figure out the band and if one of the radios was on
this band, QSY said radio. It would result in the code being littered with
if(so2r).

I am reasonably motivated to try and branch the code to see if this is
possible in some sort of proof of concept. I would appreciate some advice
about the general idea from the experts on this group. I'm not familiar
with ncurses so it may take me some time to get up to speed.

Final question, unrelated, is there anything documented for the contest
simulator? With pulseaudio, I was thinking we can have more than one audio
sink, so with a seperate application listening on a netkeyer port, it could
be possible to make pileups (from random callsigns in callmaster), add
atmospheric noise etc. It seems like the simulator doesn't really give any
feedback whether I have a callsign correct or incorrectly logged? Is this
correct or am I doing something wrong? I feel like this could be a really
nice feature to offer to people and enhance tlf. Lots of people seem to use
MorseRunner and DXlog together.

73 Matthew M5EVT.

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