The discussion of automatic signal detection and not transmitting on a 
busy frequency has been a major item of discussion in the past day on 
one of the Winlink 2000 groups and the impression that I got from the 
main spokesperson/owner was that if they had to follow busy detection 
rules, Winlink 2000 would be impossible to operate.

The comment was made in response to the following question on message 16782:

"It's the PMBO side that's the issue; Because of the hidden
transmitter problem, the client has no way of knowing when the PMBO is
stepping on another QSO."

and the response was:

"Where is this happening, Rich? You been down in the auto forward 
section operating in real-time?  Active busy detection would stop all 
PMBO operations."

This could explain why they did not go any further with the testing or 
adoption of this protocol that they invented two years ago, including 
the release of the code coming from a GPL source.

Some of you might remember my comments, when we were beta testing back 
then, that the busy signal detection was almost too good. It was more 
sensitive than a human who did not look closely at the waterfall and was 
just casually listening if the frequency was clear.

73,

Rick, KV9U



Leigh L Klotz, Jr. wrote:
> I join the voices of the many who call for the release of source code 
> for this busy detection and any patents under royalty-free license.  If 
> SCAMP's busy detector, for example, were to be released now, it would 
> show goodwill, and would also spur innovation.  Closed and unreleased, 
> it fuels conspiracy theories.
> 73,
> Leigh/WA5ZNU
>   

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