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Re: packet radio
- To: http://www.testman.com/~r, http://www.juno.com/~w1few, http://www.nh.ultranet.com/~bhavani
- Subject: Re: packet radio
- From: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert
- Date: Tue, 13 Jul 1999 19:39:50 +0000
- In-Reply-To: <3.0.5.32.19990713153138.00828ab0@tiac.net>
- Keywords: http://www.testman.com/~testlabeng
 > From: "Testlab N.A. Inc. (Engineering)" <http://www.testman.com/~testlabeng>
 > Date: Tue  Jul 13,  3:31pm
 >
 > The neatest thing is APRS which uses a GPS unit connected to your packet
 > radio which then transmits your exact position to the WWW.APRS.NET internet
 > service so that anyone can tell exactly where you are.
 > I still have a packet setup running at 1200 baud.
There's a 9600-baud packet radio->internet gateway running at MIT.  I
think it said it had a 2-mile radius, though.
Look at
http://anxiety-closet.mit.edu:8001/afs/athena.mit.edu/activity/w/w1mx/www/gw-w1mx.html
 > I haven't connected to
 > the Linux/Unix packet systems yet that use KISS.  the Bennet's have my
 > other packet unit but have no idea how to set it up.  If you're interested
 > in pursuing packet, let me know and I'll let you know what I know.
 > Igot ping to ping the Linux box (testman) but when I ping the Windows
 > computer, it goes crazy printing out ASCII characters on the Linux screen
 > and then hangs and RESET is the only way I can restart the Linux computer.
Try
# ldd `which ping`
to make sure it's using the correct libraries.  Also make sure
# which ping
ends up with the one in /bin.
 > At 06:42 PM 07/13/1999 +0000, you wrote:
 > >Have you thought of doing packet radio again?  Did you know that people
 > >are working on high-speed packet radio (56Kbps)?