agreed.
Ray T. Mahorney
WA4WGA
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Justin Mann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 05:55
Subject: Re: [dstar_digital] Re: CHIRP: An open-source programming tool for 
ICOM radios


Please include some accessibiity in the programming.  Rightnow with the current 
graphics scheme, myself as 
a totally blind user, and anyone else who uses adaptive technology will not 
benifit from your efforts.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Smith
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Monday, July 21, 2008 8:49 PM
  Subject: Re: [dstar_digital] Re: CHIRP: An open-source programming tool for 
ICOM radios


  > Running Centos v5.2 64-bit os

  Great. You should be able to just grab the source tarball and install
  pyserial to get going. CentOS has Python 2.4.x, which should be fine,
  although there may be some bumps in the road. No need to change your
  python version, just point them out if you hit issues and I'll fix them up.

  > I would like to know to help out.

  The source is fully interpreted, which means you just edit it and run
  the program. No need to compile or do anything special. You can work
  on the source files with any text editor.

  A list of things people would like to see would help me prioritize the
  work. I've decoded the basic and important bits of each of the radios,
  but there is lots left to do. There are also bound to be some cases
  where people with highly customized radio configurations cause the
  memory parsing to barf. If you come across something, grab the .img
  file for your radio out of the working directory and send it to me for
  analysis.

  -- 
  Dan Smith
  dsmith#danplanet.com, s/#/@/
  www.danplanet.com
  KK7DS




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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