Vdl 2 - Openwebrx - Linux Debian 11 amd64
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Vdl 2 - Openwebrx - Linux Debian 11 amd64
An Overview of How to Use the Open Source OpenWebRx Web-Based Radio Receiver
An Overview of How to Use the Open Source OpenWebRx Web-Based Radio Receiver to Listen to Remote Radio Transmissions
OpenWebRx allows anyone worldwide with Internet browser access to listen to radio transmissions at the location of the receiver. Depending on the OpenWebRx configuration this could be broadcast FM stations, ham radio stations (various modes), two-way radios, APRS, etc. For ham radio digital modes it can decode the signal into audio and text.
My video explains what it can be used for, and I give a tour of the interface showing you how to operate it.
Watch at https://youtu.be/hK-QYrecxVM
#technology #radio #opensource #amateurradio #openwebrx
https://youtu.be/hK-QYrecxVM
Skywave Linux ~ Global Online Listening
Skywave Linux ~ Global Online Listening
Skywave Linux is a 64 bit live system providing installed and configured software for accessing software defined radio servers locally and on the internet. With this operating system, a person may tune shortwave broadcasts, amateur radio, aeronautical, maritime, or other signals received at remote servers around the world.
SDR software is configured for popular devices, such as the RTL-SDR…
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Skywave Linux 2.1 Released
After doing bug fixes and system updates, Skywave Linux 2.1 is uploading. Completion of the upload is expected at approximately 1000 UTC, 01/05/2017. Connectivity to SourceForge is terrible today; bit torrent downloads are faster and available now: http://linuxtracker.org/index.php?page=torrent-details&id=812deb56be026320a7a744c35352aab69c061b29
Skywave Linux 2.0 is released and uploading now. It's got a new lowlatency kernel, a fresh base of Ubuntu 16.04, and plenty of application upgrades. My favorite app is the upgraded Gqrx 2.6. It looks good and works beautifully.
The Slickness of OpenWebRX
The more I use OpenWebRX the more I like how well it works with my rtl-sdr devices. For direct sampling as well as monitoring favorite VHF frequencies, it just works. Like a lot of Linux radio SDR apps, OpenWebRX requires several start parameters, but I use a script to get the parameters that change and preload the ones that don't. Hence, I merely click an icon and enter what frequency and mode to use. It is entirely possible to create scripts that will configure everything for a particular frequency or band. QtRadio, with its modules for softrock and RTL-SDRs is not as smooth or intuitive. More CPU load too. Gqrx and CubicSDR load more heavily too. If I could (and will, once I learn the code better) change anything, it would be the rather bland waterfall colors. There are better waterfalls on some online servers, so it is possible. Some noise limiting DSP would be a good feature too. Otherwise, listening is good and mostly limited by the hardware. Methinks things will slowly evolve away from these 8 bit, drifty RTL-SDRs to stable, clean, 12 to 16 bit devices resembling the Airspy and SDRPlay.
Skywave Linux 1.6 is released. There's more support for those higher performance Airspy and SDRPlay devices. OpenWebRX is installed too, for the elegant interface and networked sharing worldwide. Trunked radio decoding is now supported with SDRTrunk. Get it on SourceForge or this torrent page: http://linuxtracker.org/index.php?page=torrent-details&id=c986b137c6918540daee5bae6ff1aea10275522a