short messages through GSM modems and mobile phones.
This is the enhanced version 3.x maintained by Mr. Keijo "Keke" Kasvi.
WWW: http://smstools3.kekekasvi.com
offers the following basic CW services to a caller program:
o Morse code character translation tables, and lookup functions
o Morse code low-level timing calculations
o A 'sidetone' generation and queueing system, using either the system sound
card, the console speaker, or both
o Optional keying control for an external device, say a transmitter, or an
oscillator
o CW character and string send routines, tied in with the character lookup
o CW receive routines, also tied in to the character lookup
o Adaptive speed tracking of received CW
o An iambic keyer, with both Curtis 8044 types A and B timing
o Straight key emulation
Submitted by: self
Computes range in kilometers and great circle bearing between
QTH and remote site specified by Lat/Lon or Maidenhead Grid Square
Computes range in kilometers and great circle bearing between QTH and
a site selected from a database list for all known callsign prefixes
and their geographic position. Geographic position is by major city.
with the Gnome desktop. The program is under development, and currently
supports the CQ WW, CQ WPX, and ARRL DX contests, plus Field Day.
Features include on-the-fly dupe checking, CW and voice message keying,
super check partial, packet (Telnet and rf nodes), networking, and
radio control (currently for the FT-1000 only). The program is designed
to be used by U.S. stations, with some support for Canadian stations.
New features and contests are being added regularly, and I will consider
adding support for DX stations if there is sufficient demand.
(The port version has bug fixes and some modifications for Canadian stations.
- db)
Submitted by: self
Morse code. It starts with a few letters and adds more when it sees that
you are ready. The program won't teach you to send code. It runs in X Window.
Built with the Fast Light ToolKit(fltk) and the Simple Directmedia Layer(SDL).
It need to be compiled on X Window term for the reason fluid(fltk) need to.
WWW: http://c2.com/morse
PR: ports/118235
Submitted by: Sunry Chen <sunrychen@gmail.com>
2007-07-21 graphics/xpcd: is an abandoned project and might be vulnerable
2007-07-29 comms/ixj: does not work on any supported FreeBSD version
2007-08-19 chinese/emacs20: "editors/emacs is recommended instead for new installations"
2007-08-22 java/collections: only needed for jdk1.1, which is obsolete
SMS::Send::DeviceGsm is an SMS::Send driver that uses Device::Gsm
to deliver messages via attached hardware.
You provide the hardware port and the baudrate to use.
Consult Device::Gsm for further information on what devices
and baudrates are supported.
Author: Chris Williams <chris@bingosnet.co.uk>
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/SMS-Send-DeviceGsm/
PR: ports/116531
Submitted by: Tsung-Han Yeh <snowfly@yuntech.edu.tw>
minimal hardware, allows the construction of radios where the
actual waveforms transmitted and received are defined by software.
What this means is that it turns the digital modulation schemes
used in today's high performance wireless devices into software problems.
WWW: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuradio/
- Diane (VA3DB)
db@db.net
PR: ports/107602
Submitted by: db
download datalogs from the Royaltek RBT-3000 bluetooth GPS receiver
(and similar) over a bluetooth link. Based on bluegps-linux.
PR: ports/115012
Submitted by: Dirk-Willem van Gulik <dirkx@webweaving.org>
Firmware for the Broadcom BCM2033 chip based Bluetooth USB
devices. To be downloaded with bcmfw(1). The ubtbcmfw(4)
and ng_ubt(4) kernel modules need to be installed.
PR: ports/115036
Submitted by: Dirk-Willem van Gulik <dirkx@joost.com>
comms/tilp has been superseded by comms/tilp2
It was kept arround until the latter matured, which can now
be considered the case. The original version is no longer
supported by the authors and both ports conflict now. I'm
not sure what exactly should happen, but for me the port
can be removed and maybe added to MOVED.
PR: ports/115979
Submitted by: Tijl Coosemans <tijl@ulyssis.org>
Unix operating systems, similar to the classic DOS version of Rufz
by DL4MM. It's not intended for learning telegraphy (have a look at
radio.linux.org.au for CW learning software), but to improve the ability
to copy callsigns at high speeds, as needed for example for Contesting.
Approved by: ehaupt (mentor)
2007-03-10 sysutils/xperfmon3: Broken on all supported versions of FreeBSD
2007-03-10 comms/mwavem: Broken on all supported versions of FreeBSD
2007-03-09 sysutils/diskusage: Unmainntaied, MASTER_SITES disappeared, WWW disappeared.
2007-03-10 sysutils/xperfmon3: Broken on all supported versions of FreeBSD
2007-03-10 comms/mwavem: Broken on all supported versions of FreeBSD
viewing and analyzing calls for various types of PBX (Private Branch eXchange)
models. At present, the program operates successfully with Panasonic, Samsung,
Hybrex, Siemens, LG, and Alcatel PBX models.
WWW: http://www.atslog.dp.ua/en/about/
PR: ports/107169
Submitted by: Alexander Logvinov <ports at logvinov.com>
phones with your PC. It handles full SMS control, dialing calls, phonebook, and
phone status monitoring. It's also integrated with the KDE environment, so it
can be embedd in Kontact, or import/export from and to KAddressBook. It has
been tested on Motorola, Nokia, Siemens, Sony Ericsson and LG mobile phones.
Anyway each AT Command compliant device should be well supported.
WWW: http://www.kmobiletools.org/
PR: ports/106940
Submitted by: Stefan Ehmann <shoesoft at gmx.net>
using state of the art digital techniques. Typical applications
include communication by meteor scatter and
EME (Earth-Moon-Earth) propagation paths.
WWW: http://pulsar.princeton.edu/~joe/K1JT
- Diane Bruce, VA3DB
PR: ports/101360
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db at db.net>
SSH. Supports ANSI music and the IBM charset when possible. Will run from a
console, under X11 using XLib, or using SDL.
WWW: http://syncterm.bbsdev.net/
PR: ports/104622
Submitted by: shurd
HCF chipset (Acorp PIM/PIM2). It consists of a shim for the Linux binary
only object file.
WWW: http://www.linuxant.com/
- Alexey Illarionov <littlesavage@rambler.ru>
PR: ports/102365
Submitted by: Alexey Illarionov <littlesavage at rambler.ru>
Research Council Canada (NRC). This software uses signals from radio
station CHU to set and frequency discipline the system clock on a
Linux (FreeBSD) based system.
WWW: http://www.rossi.com/chu/
PR: ports/103369
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db(at)db.net>
(Who is On The Air Database) written by me (IZ0ETE).
It's very similar to a DX Cluster client, but it works with the WOTA server.
If you don't known what is the WOTA DB, please read some info at
http://www.wotadb.org.
It's written in C and GTK, and it should work on the latest
Linux/BSD distributions.
Please report to me your successful installation. (Linux, FreeBSD at the moment)
WWW: http://people.fabaris.it/iz0ete/xwota/
- Diane VA3DB
db@db.net
PR: ports/103305
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db at db.net
the realtime ARQ modes pactor 1, amtor, gtor without a ptc, only with a
soundcard and a pc and linux(FreeBSD), all of which need not be the newest.
The core of hf, the heart of the program (hfkernel) is a real master-piece
of code, it has originally been made by Tom Sailer, many thanks Tom!
hf can also do MT63 and has a CW elbug function.
WWW: http://www.hf.webmasternet.org
- Diane Bruce, VA3DB
db@db.net
PR: ports/101452
Submitted by: db
This is ser2net, a program for allowing network connections to serial
ports. See the man page for information about using the program.
Note that ser2net supports RFC 2217 (remote control of serial port
parameters), but you must have a complient client. The only one I
know if is kermit (http://www.columbia.edu/kermit).
WWW: http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/ser2net/
Submitted by: Devon H. O'Dell <devon.odell@coyotepoint.com>
SerialOverIP Version 1.0, 8 Mar 2002
Tool for transport of serial interfaces over UDP/IP.
Useful for accessing a distant serial device by a local Windoze
program.
WWW: http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/serialoverip/
Author: Stefan-Florin Nicola <sten@fx.ro>
Submitted by: Devon H. O'Dell <devon.odell@coyotepoint.com>
SMS::Send is intended to provide a driver-based single API for sending SMS and
MMS messages. The intent is to provide a single API against which to write the
code to send an SMS message.
At the same time, the intent is to remove the limits of some of the previous
attempts at this sort of API, like "must be free internet-based SMS services".
SMS::Send drivers are installed seperately, and might use the web, email or
physical SMS hardware. It could be a free or paid. The details shouldn't matter.
You should not have to care how it is actually sent, only that it has been sent
(although some drivers may not be able to provide certainty).
Author: Adam Kennedy <cpan@ali.as>
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/SMS-Send/
PR: based on 102506
Submitted by: snowfly@yuntech.edu.tw
It's really accurate as it calculates using the NORAD SGP4/SDP4 Models.
It Controls your Rig for doppler compensation / antenna pointing
Written by lx2gt AT users.sourceforge.net
WWW: http://ktrack.sourceforge.net/
- Diane Bruce, VA3DB
db@db.net
PR: ports/93781
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db at db.net>
and accelerated primitives useful in digital signal processing (DSP).
Except for the Reed-Solomon codecs, these functions take full advantage of
the MMX, SSE and SSE2 SIMD instruction sets on Intel/AMD IA-32 processors
and the Altivec/VMX/Velocity Engine SIMD instruction set on the
G4 and G5 PowerPC.
The library includes Viterbi decoders for the following convolutional codes:
rate 1/2 k=7
rate 1/2 k=9
rate 1/6 k=15 ("Cassini")
plus two Reed-Solomon encoder-decoders:
one optimized for the (255,223) CCSDS standard code
a general purpose encoder/decoder for arbitrary RS codes
and three low-level 16-bit DSP support routines:
signed dot product
peak detection
sum-of-squares (energy) computation
This library is licensed under the "lesser" GNU General Public License.
WWW: http://www.ka9q.net/code/fec/
- Diane Bruce, VA3DB
db@db.net
PR: ports/99895
Submitted by: db
operators. Despite its name, it supports all three major Irish operators - o2
Ireland, Vodafone Ireland and Meteor Ireland.
The program works by simulating a web browser's interaction with those
websites. In essense, the program is really just a stripped-down specialised
browser.
At the time of writing, o2 web accounts have 250 free web texts per month,
Vodafone 300 and Meteor 300. After sending a message, o2sms will tell you how
many you have remaining.
WWW: http://www.mackers.com/projects/o2sms/
PR: ports/98916
Submitted by: Conor McDermottroe <ports at mcdermottroe.com>
utility. Is designed for the users who receive faxes using computers.
PR: ports/90414
Submitted by: Ion-Mihai "IOnut" Tetcu <itetcu@people.tecnik93.com>
Fax::Hylafax::Client is a simple Perl client for the HylaFAX fax server
(www.hylafax.org). It communicates with the server directly through the FTP
protocol and thus does not require any HylaFAX software component to be
installed on the client machine.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/~arak/Fax-Hylafax-Client-1.01/
PR: ports/85954
Submitted by: Tony Shadwick <tshadwick@oss-solutions.com>
Yagi-Uda antennas, with 2 or more elements, such as shown below. Additionally,
a very simple program called dipole works with just a dipole, but its
functionality is limited.
PR: ports/83737
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
The translation was performed mostly "by hand" and a lot of modifications
to the original program were introduced in order to modernize the NEC2
and to remove as many built-in limitations as possible. The attendant
SOMNEC program was also translated to C and incorporated in nec2c as a
function so that Sommerfeld ground solutions are a part of the program.
PR: ports/83392
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
SPLAT! is an RF Signal Propagation, Loss, And Terrain analysis tool for
the spectrum between 20 MHz and 20 GHz. Useful to Amateur Radio operators.
Written by John A. Magliacane, KD2BD
WWW: http://www.qsl.net/kd2bd/splat.html
PR: ports/83164
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
CID information from a modem, and a client to display the CID information on a
computer, TiVo, text pager, or cell phone. Multiple clients are permitted.
PR: ports/81954
Submitted by: David <david@freshports.org>
This is a small PSK31 program that uses QT, and a soundcard as modem.
WWW: http://linpsk.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/81617
Submitted by: Søren Straarup <xride@x12.dk>
Cwdaemon is a small daemon which uses the pc parallel or serial port and a
simple transistor switch to output morse code to a transmitter from a text
message sent to it via the udp internet protocol.
PR: ports/74772
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db AT db.net>
Currently the driver is maintained out-of-tree as a set of files to be
downloaded and built manually.
PR: ports/76802
Submitted by: Craig Boston <craig@yekse.gank.org>
The mission of the Trusted QSL Group is to keep eQSL an open and free
activity for amateur radio operators by promoting the
Digital Signature Standard (DSS).
PR: ports/70643
Submitted by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
APRS is Amateur Position Reporting System. It's a system for handling
real time information across radio and internet links.
PR: ports/68655
Submitted by: Carl Makin <carl@stagecraft.cx>
This program is a Gtk+/Gtkmm front end for the efax program for
receiving and sending faxes with a fax modem. Any files to be faxed
must be in postscript format, which is the generic printer format for
Unix/Linux systems. The program will use ghostscript to convert these
into the Group 3 fax format which the fax modem will understand.
WWW: http://www.cvine.freeserve.co.uk/efax-gtk/
PR: ports/63844
Submitted by: Jean-Baptiste Quenot <jb.quenot@caraldi.com>
exercises: Classic exercise, the Koch method, Callsign exercise, and
exercises read from files.
PR: ports/64358
Submitted by: Scott Lambert <lambert@lambertfam.org>
to transport files over OBEX protocol. This only works for Bluetooth
and needs -CURRENT as of January 20 or newer (sdpd import) to work,
so IGNORE on 5.2.1-R and older.
PR: ports/64597
Submitted by: Guido Falsi <mad@madpilot.net>
a data over infrared and Bluetooth.
This port is adapted to work with FreeBSD Bluetooth stack.
PR: ports/64596
Submitted by: Guido Falsi <mad@madpilot.net>
written using Gtk+ and Gnome widgets by Alexandru Csete.
Part of the grounstation suite, it purpose is to control
an amateur radio transceiver from X. It supports any of
the transceivers that hamlib supports, including rpc.rigd
over the network. However, at present only a subset of the
hamlib functions are provided.
The groundstation suite comprises Gnome-rig and Gnome-predict
and is intended to provide a low-cost amateur radio station
with the facilities of a high-end satellite station.
WWW: http://groundstation.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/61729
Submitted by: Matt Dawson <matt@mattsnetwork.co.uk>
written using Gtk+ and Gnome widgets by Alexandru Csete.
Part of the grounstation suite, its purpose is to track
the various amateur, weather and military satellites that
are of interest to radio amateurs.
The groundstation suite comprises Gnome-rig and Gnome-predict
and is intended to provide a low-cost amateur radio station
with the facilities of a high-end satellite station.
WWW: http://groundstation.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/61727
Submitted by: Matt Dawson <matt@mattsnetwork.co.uk>
short text messages to cell phones. Port contains python module
and a command-line client 'sms'.
PR: ports/59987
Submitted by: Andy Gilligan <andy@evo6.org>
This is a new port for the libirman library for use with
Evation's Irman infrared reciever.
PR: ports/50443
Submitted by: Douglas K. Rand <rand@meridian-enviro.com>
gscmxx can access siemens cellular phones via scmxx. it
supports phonebooks, addressbooks, sms and some other
features.
PR: ports/52176
Submitted by: Sven Mohr <svmohr@red-mercury.de>
This is a port of the LIRC, Linux Infrared Remote Control,
package (www.lirc.org). This port installs the daemons and
tools for interacting with device drivers that support the
LIRC device interface. The port does not install any FreeBSD
infrared device drivers yet; the user must obtain these
from third parties or port the existing Linux drivers.
PR: ports/46774
Submitted by: Mike Heffner <mikeh@FreeBSD.org> <mheffner@acm.vt.edu>
Libticables is part of TiLP, a program to connect a TI
calculator to your computer. This lib manages several types
of cables (serial, parallel, usb).
PR: ports/56134
Submitted by: Tijl Coosemans <tijl@ulyssis.org>
BinkleyForce is a simple ifcico like FTN mailer. It can
works via TCP/IP as well as on modem links. Look sample
configs for more information.
PR: ports/38635
Submitted by: Andrew Dolgov <fox@sigsegv.spb.ru>
PhoneJack cards.
These ISA and PCI telephony cards allow VoIP and Video Conferencing
using the OpenH323 suite of applications with a standard
telephone handset (including making the phone ring for incomming calls,
allowing dialing via the telephone and using the phone's speaker and mic
for the audio (freeing up the sound card).
They also feature a hardware G.723.1 audio codec making it easier to talk
to NetMeeting and H.323 users.
kernels and romdisks to the Agenda VR3.
FEATURES
o Direct serial access (w/o minicom)
o Built-in Xmodem (send) support
o Built-in Etxack (send) support (c/o Brad @ Agenda)
o Progress meters
o Capture file
o PMON over-write detection/protection
LATEST VERSION
You can always get the latest version of this utility from:
WWW: http://www.apex.net/~jeff/agenda-utils/
of pppd. I *really* like this one because it relies on shell
scripts rather than requiring you to use its GUI (i.e.: you can use it
only once, just to create your pppd scripts. Plus it has several
different GUI looks. :-) :-)
Oh well, that was the old days when i was on a modem. Bwahahaha!!
/me pets his 10baseT college ethernet connection. Good connection.
Good! Good!!
Forgotten by: will (yes, this was in my ~/ports dir for a long
long time: 403 days... longer than I have
been a committer) *hangs head in shame*
Reminded by: Some guy on IRC who's coming to Purdue. ;)
Soldier! Commit this goldurned thing to history!
YES SIR!!!! <WHIRR> *click*
"The comservd program provides a facility to access network terminal
server serial ports, such as those available on Xyplex terminal server
models, via /dev device file entries. This allows programs such as
tip(1) to access devices connected to the terminal server serial
ports."
mailing stuff out automatically, it is just too much. Please use
lrzsz, zmtx-zmrx or any other free alternative.
If nothing else works, you can always compile rzsz from the original
source.
who brought you C-Kermit, but released under the GPL. It's
meant to be small and fast and only useful for up/downloading.
PR: 15984
Submitted by: Dom.Mitchell@palmerharvey.co.uk