![]() Now we use N1MM in network mode when site-wide dupe checking is necessary. They have the single program model with customizations for each supported contest’s rules.įor the ARRL Field Day up through 2010 my club used the network version of the N3FJP FDNet software. N1MM and Writelog are two contest logging programs I am starting to use more often. However, if there is a N3FJP program for your favorite contest, it is a dirt simple way of getting quickly accustomed to that contest’s rules. The latter method is certainly the more flexible way to go. This is unlike most other contest logging programs which have one base program with customizations for each contest. For quick install and use, N3FJP has contest logging software customized for each supported event. There is still work to be done, but this, for me, is pretty cool. This is exactly what I have done and you can see my QSOs here… With the MySQL tables near a web server, I can now serve up QSO data live as it is saved. Plus, with some internet trickery, you can host the database somewhere else and that is exactly what I did. This, finally, divorces the log data from the proprietary database structure of most other programs. However, the one thing I like most about Ham Radio Deluxe is its ability to save the log information in a MySQL database. ![]() There is a central log window with satellite windows used for specific actions including Digital Modes and Satellite Frequency tracking. I have avoided it for many years because of some computer blue screen events while trying to run it. From there I can keep track of the various totals, upload to eQSL, upload to Logbook of the World (LOTW) and keep track of QSL card sent and received status. The way I use my logging software packages is all my contacts eventually wind up in ACLog.
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