JT65/JT9 not impervious to false positives…

January 20, 2014 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

I haven’t had a lot of time to operate JT65/JT9, my preferred digital mode at the moment, but I often leave my receiver hooked up and monitoring the bands for reception reports. My wet-noodle of an antenna can usually pull in signals from about 40 different counties in the span of a week of monitoring. […]

On Computer Chess, including Stockfish and SmallFish

January 13, 2014 | Computer Chess, Computer Games, My Projects | By: Mark VandeWettering

Off and on I’ve been pondering some changes to my computer checkers program called Milhouse. Most of these changes have relatively little to do with checkers per se, but are just changes to the algorithms that are common to nearly all game-tree search programs. Since computer chess has always been more popular than computer checkers, […]

IRLP/Echolink. Raspberry Pi. Baofeng. Cheap.

January 7, 2014 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

I love cheap hacks and cheap gadgets. Don’t get me wrong: I also like the expensive good stuff, but if you don’t have a clear idea of what you want and need, spending a lot of money on gadgets just isn’t in the cards. But if the gadgets are cheap enough, experimentation becomes possible for […]

Combinations…

January 4, 2014 | Games and Diversions, Math | By: Mark VandeWettering

This is a math/geeky/computer post of something relatively simple, but it arose in the wild in a program that I wrote several years ago, and when I saw it again, it confused me, and I spent a bit of time thinking about it, and I thought I might just write it up. If math/geeky/computer stuff […]

JT65 vs JT9 (vs WSPR?)

December 31, 2013 | Amateur Radio, WSPR | By: Mark VandeWettering

For the last several days, I’ve been running the latest version of wsjtx using my RFSPACE SDRIQ software defined radio, and just logging the results. Previously, for most of my JT65 needs, I used JT65-HF, but I was interested in trying out the JT9 mode as recommended to me by numerous hams. JT9 uses a […]

Some Musings on Crossword Puzzles…

December 17, 2013 | Games and Diversions | By: Mark VandeWettering

When I was growing up, my Grandma Busch used to spend time each morning doing crossword puzzles. Off and on through my life, probably in imitation of her, I’ve enjoyed sitting down and doing them as well. The Oakland Tribune (the paper I see most often) carries two different puzzles per day: the Daily Commuter, […]

Visual Cryptography

November 20, 2013 | Cryptography, My Projects | By: Mark VandeWettering

I read an interesting article the other day. I’ll skip to the end to show you the result. Check out this pair of binary images: Not too fascinating, huh? If you print both images out on transparency though, and stack them together, you’ll get this… Hopefully that worked (with my limited CSS skills, I don’t […]

Deconstructing the Classic Atari Game: Star Raiders

November 17, 2013 | Computer Graphics, My Projects, Retrocomputing | By: Mark VandeWettering

Gasp, I know. It’s been some time since I posted here. A combination of life and work events have conspired to sap me of my usual exuberant energy for the nerdy, geeky pointless topics that I usually like to post about here. But nerdy, geeky, pointless endeavors do continue (even if at a reduced pace) […]

Google Chromecast: First Impressions…

September 21, 2013 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

It’s cool. It’s cheap. You might want to get one. Okay, for those of you who haven’t heard of them, the Google Chromecast is a little $35 gadget that plugs into the HDMI port on your TV and allows you to watch stream Netflix/YouTube/Google Play videos from your iPad/iPhone/Android/laptop device on your big screen. with […]

Factoring numbers from Ivar Peterson’s The Mathematical Tourist

August 18, 2013 | Math | By: Mark VandeWettering

I’m a bit of a math geek. I have been periodically fascinated by the factoring of large numbers, which plays such an important role in modern cryptography algorithms like RSA. I’ve coded a few of the non-trivial factorization algorithms, such as Pollard-rho, but haven’t done a whole lot with it. It mostly remains just a […]

My comments re: RM-11699, a propsal to allow encryption on amateur radio frequencies…

July 10, 2013 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

This is probably boring to a great number of you, but a recent FCC proposed notice of rule making has been getting a lot of play lately. RM-11699 is a proposal to allow encryption of traffic in amateur radio so that we can handle information of a sensitive nature in times of emergency, especially information […]

More weekend radio…

July 8, 2013 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

I didn’t get a whole lot more amateur radio done.   I spent some time running JT65, mostly on 20m, but sometimes skipping up higher to 17m and 15m.  I’m still eight states short of my WAS, and was teased by stations in NV, WY and ND, which I managed to start QSOs with, but didn’t […]

A week of listening to JT65…

July 3, 2013 | Amateur Radio | By: Mark VandeWettering

I’ve been leaving my radio monitoring JT65 frequencies for the last week, largely on 20m, with occasional diversions to 40m, 30m, and 17m. JT65HF can upload all your spots to pskreporter and from them, you can download an ADIF log file. I thought I’d see what stations I heard over the last week, and the […]

RTLSDR decoding of ADS-B signals…

June 26, 2013 | Amateur Radio, Radio Controlled Airplanes, Software | By: Mark VandeWettering

A few days ago, I wrote about the EZCAP EZTV645 dongle that I got which could be used with RTLSDR software to implement asoftware defined radio that only cost $20. I also had ordered a NooElec radio (similar, but with the R820T tuner that most people seem to favor) as well as an MCX-SMA adapter […]

Lesson learned… Check your coax!

June 25, 2013 | Amateur Radio, WSPR | By: Mark VandeWettering

Okay, I knew that my radio was acting deaf, and I thought I’d know what was wrong. I use a low doublet antenna made from speaker wire, and it has been outside, weathering the elements for quite some time. Sure enough, when I went outside, I saw that one of the connections feeding my balun […]