Introduce Yourself #65
Replies: 7 comments 3 replies
-
I moved Mike's prior entries to here so we could start this Introduce yourself discussion. My name is Scott Hibbs KD4SIR. I live in Evansville Indiana. I got involved with GitHub through my other project "FDLog Enhanced". I liked that program so much that I started to learn Python just so I could enhance it. I've been a ham for over 30 years and I currently enjoy 40M FT8 and OMISS nets. I use Morse Runner to pretend that I know Morse Code. I created a welcome to Morse Runner Community Edition video on my YouTube page. It can be found at https://youtu.be/Y1kHqJRytMM I really hope you join us - and please take a moment to introduce yourself. Since I don't program Pascal, I'll focus on documentation, program testing and the GUI. Oh, I'll also cheerlead if you need it. :) Scott, KD4SIR |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
My name is Mike Brashler, W7SST. Early last spring, I got the idea of adding the ARRL Field Day contest to Morse Runner. I started researching the various forks from VE3NEA's original work and discovered many independent development efforts. Since then, I have implemented a generalized, table-driven approach to supporting multiple contests within Morse Runner, including CQWPX, CWOPS CWT, ARRL Field Day, and NCL NAQP. My long-term goal is to combine the various development efforts into a common repository and encourage other developers and users to join in this effort. Hopefully we can get a group of people working on a common code base. Over the next year, I plan to pull changes/enhancements from the various development branches into this repository. I invite you to:
Later this fall, we will announce this project to a larger community (e.g N1MM user community) to gain additional resources. Scott Hibbs, KD4SIR, has plans to announce this project to his local ham radio club and post a YouTube video. For now, I'd like to form a core group of contributors to get this started. Please let me know if you have any feedback or if I can answer any questions. Thank you and best regards. 73, |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
My name is Takayoshi Muto, JR8PPG. 73 |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
hello hello , I am Fanjun Kong, BH1SCW I am so happy that mr is still developing. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
hi all, Tom NJ2DX here. Professional software developer for decades and wondering how I can help… |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Awesome! Thank you.
…On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 5:12 AM Thomas Kenny ***@***.***> wrote:
Mike, thanks. I think I'll write up new developer getting started docs to
help future contributors onboard. 73 Tom NJ2DX
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#65 (reply in thread)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AZJSVSM3EYMVSP25CZYDMTTWHTYC7ANCNFSM6AAAAAARD24U6U>
.
You are receiving this because you commented.Message ID:
***@***.***>
|
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I'm a ham in California, a retired civil engineer, although on the side I do structural analysis of towers to help ham get permits. I'm not a professional developer. I've learned enough Python and QT to be dangerous. I have a remote station where I do my station control with small Linux boards using Python and QT5. A long time ago I did a little bit of work in Delphi but I've forgotten most of it. From what I've seen making the jump from Python to Pascal doesn't look too intimidating. In the recent 2022 CQWWCW I made 1,200 QSOs. I did drills daily before the contest with 1.81 and it really helped me with my ability to run stations. 73 Jim K6OK |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
👋 Welcome!
We’re using Discussions as a place to connect with other members of our community. We hope that you:
build together 💪.
To get started, comment below with an introduction of yourself and tell us about what you do with this community.
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions