* Convers, IRC and Jabber @ 2007-04-20 18:33 Bill Vodall WA7NWP 2007-04-20 21:07 ` Patrick Ouellette 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Bill Vodall WA7NWP @ 2007-04-20 18:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-hams Is anybody using this tool to connect Convers to IRC? Anybody looked at connecting Jabber to Convers? Thanks, Bill - WA7NWP ----- To: tcpip@ww X-Forwarded: db0lj-1.ampr.org, 22.05.97 13:39 by rfc2dpbox (dl5di,970422) Hi all, some time ago I found it to be a good idea to write a program which allows convers sysops to connect their network to an irc network in a way which enables all users to talk to each other. This allows for the following two optimizations: 1.) Easy and slow migration to the technically superficial IRC system 2.) Allows users to chat with convers users using a modern graphical IRC client like mIrc, Zircon and so on. This means a great improvement in chat convenience. I called my program "ircgate" and the current version is 0.4b. If you read this article on a BBS system you will also find another article with a 7plus-encoded archive containing the package. If not, you can get it by FTP from the following systems: Home system, but only reachable from within amprnet: ftp://dg1kjd-svr.ampr.org/pub/linux/irc/ircgate-0.4b.tar.gz Backup 1,from outside amprnet: ftp://db0bm.automation.fh-aachen.de/pub/incoming/ircgate/ircgate-0.4b.tar.gz amprnet: ftp://db0bm.ampr.org/pub/incoming/ircgate/ircgate-0.4b.tar.gz Backup 2: ftp://ftp.ucsd.edu/hamradio/packet/tcpip/incoming/ircgate-0.4b.tar.gz Vy 42 Jen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Convers, IRC and Jabber 2007-04-20 18:33 Convers, IRC and Jabber Bill Vodall WA7NWP @ 2007-04-20 21:07 ` Patrick Ouellette 2007-04-21 2:53 ` IT3 Stuart Blake Tener 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Patrick Ouellette @ 2007-04-20 21:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Bill Vodall WA7NWP; +Cc: linux-hams On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 06:33:34PM +0000, Bill Vodall WA7NWP wrote: > > Is anybody using this tool to connect Convers to IRC? > > Anybody looked at connecting Jabber to Convers? > I would think it shouldn't be that hard. If you have TCP/IP set up on your ham box, you should be able to run an IRC server or a Jabber server. The Jabber side might even be easier since the Jabber server supports gateways to other services by design. I would have some concerns about connecting Convers and IRC/Jabber unless I had complete control over the people using the system (to ensure they were licensed amateurs if connecting over the Internet outside the 44.x.x.x net). -- Patrick Ouellette pat@flying-gecko.net kb8pym@arrl.net Amateur Radio: KB8PYM Living life to a Jimmy Buffett soundtrack "Crank the amp to 11, this needs more cowbell - and a llama wouldn't hurt either" ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Convers, IRC and Jabber 2007-04-20 21:07 ` Patrick Ouellette @ 2007-04-21 2:53 ` IT3 Stuart Blake Tener 2007-04-22 17:28 ` Bill Vodall WA7NWP 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: IT3 Stuart Blake Tener @ 2007-04-21 2:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Patrick Ouellette; +Cc: Bill Vodall WA7NWP, linux-hams Patrick, et alia: Quoting Patrick Ouellette <pat@flying-gecko.net>: > On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 06:33:34PM +0000, Bill Vodall WA7NWP wrote: > > > > Is anybody using this tool to connect Convers to IRC? > > > > Anybody looked at connecting Jabber to Convers? > > > > I would think it shouldn't be that hard. If you have TCP/IP set up on > your ham box, you should be able to run an IRC server or a Jabber > server. The Jabber side might even be easier since the Jabber server > supports gateways to other services by design. > > I would have some concerns about connecting Convers and IRC/Jabber unless > I had complete control over the people using the system (to ensure they > were licensed amateurs if connecting over the Internet outside the > 44.x.x.x net). Indeed I can find agreement with this, however, there is a particular mechanism that might work to afford a comfortable stance for containing the allowance of Ham's to legally and lawfully connect to the Internet. I am contemplating the purchase of a 1.2GHz Radio at the Hamvention this year, and intend to connect it to one of the ports on my Cisco router, which will be Internet connected, and the concept of preservation regarding the integrity of users to cross from the Internet to the RF Data Network and vice versa will be likely resolved as follows: In order for someone to cross from the Internet to the RF Data Network I would need to create an account on the router for them, so they access an encrypted VPN connection (encryption occurrent between their client and the router) with traffic being unencrypted when forwarded to the RF Data Network. I am still researching this, but I believe that an encrypted VPN session from the RF Data Network could be used, provided the encryption passwords were to be published in advance (I intend to do so on a website), prior to the user having ability to use the connection. The publication of the passwords, call signs, as well as usernames would be deliberate and well in advance of the enablement of the accounts being made accessible, and continually published until the amateur operator requested to discontinue his usage of the VPN. Additionally, I would intend to limit what website or other access was capable such that no commercial activity was transmitted over the RF Data Network. I wonder if Icom is contemplating any sort of 2.4GHz D-STAR equipment that would be cable of transmitting digital voice, as well as data, and thirdly be able to be switched into a "non amateur data mode" such that it could be used for 2.4Ghz data transfer in commercial mode, and also have an Amateur Radio mode. > > > -- > > Patrick Ouellette pat@flying-gecko.net > kb8pym@arrl.net Amateur Radio: KB8PYM > Living life to a Jimmy Buffett soundtrack > "Crank the amp to 11, this needs more cowbell - and a llama wouldn't hurt > either" > - > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-hams" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > -- IT3 Stuart Blake Tener, USN(RC), N3GWG Beverly Hills, CA mobile: (310) 358-0202 Nextel: 124*233172*14 e-mail: teners@bh90210.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Convers, IRC and Jabber 2007-04-21 2:53 ` IT3 Stuart Blake Tener @ 2007-04-22 17:28 ` Bill Vodall WA7NWP 2007-04-22 17:55 ` Frank Brickle 2007-04-22 18:31 ` Chuck Hast 0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Bill Vodall WA7NWP @ 2007-04-22 17:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-hams > > I would have some concerns about connecting Convers and IRC/Jabber unless > > I had complete control over the people using the system (to ensure they > > were licensed amateurs if connecting over the Internet outside the > > 44.x.x.x net). > > Indeed I can find agreement with this, however, there is a particular mechanism > that might work to afford a comfortable stance for containing the allowance of > Ham's to legally and lawfully connect to the Internet. We went through all of these connectivity issues 15+ years ago. It's no longer an issue -- at least here in the US. If there are abuses, we have the technology to deal with it. That process has served us well for many years and it hasn't been the end of the world as we know it because a few packets generated by non-hams have been transmitted as third party content. What is hobbling the progress in Amateur Radio is the lack of folks getting on the air and doing neat stuff. Far too many of our frequency resources are vastly underused and that's a shame since there have never been so many opportunities for experimentation and communications. Connecting Jabber, IRC and Convers then bringing that to APRS and our mobile D700/D7 messaging technology is, to me, just one example of what we can do. 73 Bill - WA7NWP PS. Don't get me started on 1200 baud in 2007 - or the 44 net. :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Convers, IRC and Jabber 2007-04-22 17:28 ` Bill Vodall WA7NWP @ 2007-04-22 17:55 ` Frank Brickle 2007-04-22 18:31 ` Chuck Hast 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Frank Brickle @ 2007-04-22 17:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Bill Vodall WA7NWP; +Cc: linux-hams Bill Vodall WA7NWP wrote: ... Connecting Jabber, IRC and Convers then bringing > that to APRS and our mobile D700/D7 messaging technology is, to me, > just one example of what we can do... There's a new AMSAT-NA satellite, Eagle, currently under design. One of the payloads will be a messaging service built on jabber. Access will be with an inexpensive handheld terminal and a simple antenna. Part of the motivation is to make amateur satellite work accessible and useful to a wider range of hams, without needing a big investment in equipment or startup time. Interoperation of the Eagle messaging service with pretty much everything else will be implemented on the ground, with terrestrial jabber servers and gateways. 73 Frank AB2KT Member, AMSAT Eagile Design Team ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Convers, IRC and Jabber 2007-04-22 17:28 ` Bill Vodall WA7NWP 2007-04-22 17:55 ` Frank Brickle @ 2007-04-22 18:31 ` Chuck Hast 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Chuck Hast @ 2007-04-22 18:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Bill Vodall WA7NWP; +Cc: linux-hams On 4/22/07, Bill Vodall WA7NWP <wa7nwp@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I would have some concerns about connecting Convers and IRC/Jabber unless > > > I had complete control over the people using the system (to ensure they > > > were licensed amateurs if connecting over the Internet outside the > > > 44.x.x.x net). > > > > Indeed I can find agreement with this, however, there is a particular mechanism > > that might work to afford a comfortable stance for containing the allowance of > > Ham's to legally and lawfully connect to the Internet. > > > We went through all of these connectivity issues 15+ years ago. It's > no longer an issue -- at least here in the US. > > If there are abuses, we have the technology to deal with it. That > process has served us well for many years and it hasn't been the end > of the world as we know it because a few packets generated by non-hams > have been transmitted as third party content. > > What is hobbling the progress in Amateur Radio is the lack of folks > getting on the air and doing neat stuff. Far too many of our > frequency resources are vastly underused and that's a shame since > there have never been so many opportunities for experimentation and > communications. Connecting Jabber, IRC and Convers then bringing > that to APRS and our mobile D700/D7 messaging technology is, to me, > just one example of what we can do. > > 73 > Bill - WA7NWP > > PS. Don't get me started on 1200 baud in 2007 - or the 44 net. :-) I want a palm type device that will let me do VoIP and images, and run at a reasonable speed. Where I worked up until a year ago (sales did not sell so they got rid of field and R&D, go figure) we did some work with palm type devices and 802.11 to do VoIP and images to a handheld a utility tech would carry around with him, but get hams to do the same thing (you can go out and buy all of the pieces to do a prototype) is like pulling hen's teeth. No do not get me started either... All the bits and pieces are out there to do it and we STILL do nothing... There is so much neat stuff to do, but no one is inter- ested except a very small group of us (I am doing some optical stuff which I think has promise for some disaster recovery scenarios) I go to hamfest and come home depressed... No wonder it is hard to get young people in the hobby. By way the devices we used at the place I worked were COTS boxes from CompUSA, Circuit City, etc... No black boxes, but some or our guys made them work. That was stuff we hams used to do and show it to the rest of the world, now it is bass ackward... -- Chuck Hast -- KP4DJT -- To paraphrase my flight instructor; "the only dumb question is the one you DID NOT ask resulting in my going out and having to identify your bits and pieces in the midst of torn and twisted metal." ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-04-22 18:31 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2007-04-20 18:33 Convers, IRC and Jabber Bill Vodall WA7NWP 2007-04-20 21:07 ` Patrick Ouellette 2007-04-21 2:53 ` IT3 Stuart Blake Tener 2007-04-22 17:28 ` Bill Vodall WA7NWP 2007-04-22 17:55 ` Frank Brickle 2007-04-22 18:31 ` Chuck Hast
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