You'd better Jerry,
I've installed URONode, thanks to Brian, and I've never looked back to anything else since then really! It replaces JNOS for most of it's operations. It's got a very nice MBOX too and you can connect to it any application that runs in Linux or elsewhere.
73 de Demetre SV1UY
On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 11:52 AM, Jerry n9lya@blueriver.net wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Hi Brian.. BPQ of any of the three present flavors is much more than a node front end..
BPQ has come a long way over the last several years with all kinds of features. Advancements coming at warp speed.
I still need to get with u and turn my jnos box into a uronode. :)
-----Original Message----- From: Brian Rogers [mailto:n1uro@n1uro.ampr.org] Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2013 8:00 PM To: n9lya@blueriver.net; AMPRNet working group Subject: Re: [44net] IP Gateway
On Thu, 2013-09-12 at 15:48 -0400, Jerry spake:
in regards to LinBPQ,
Do you have an allocation in the 44 network? I'm thinking of trying to add the amprnet tunnelling code to LinBPQ.
73, John
This suggests that BPQ for linux contains it's own protocol stack, which for a simple node front-end should not be necessary. I may be wrong but if this is not true, than the protocols should be read from the system and routing via ipencap should already be there. -- 73 de Brian Rogers - N1URO email: n1uro@n1uro.ampr.org Web: http://www.n1uro.net/ Ampr1: http://n1uro.ampr.org/ Ampr2: http://nos.n1uro.ampr.org Linux Amateur Radio Services axMail-Fax & URONode AmprNet coordinator for: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
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