v1.284: "disable recent changes" admin option, new SSTV extension
v1.284 has a new admin option switch on the "config" tab, at the bottom right of the page, called "Disable recent changes?". If you set it to "Yes" then changes in the current release that are somewhat risky will be bypassed (a restart will be required when the option is changed). In the v1.284 release this means the Firefox audio watchdog workaround and the task scheduler priority changes for the new SSTV extension will be disabled.
The new SSTV extension is a very preliminary alpha release. It is mostly intended to facilitate development since there is essentially no live SSTV reception on our own Kiwis in NZ. Use the "Test image" button to decode a stored test pattern (deliberately slanted to test the alignment code)
There are many known problems and essentially no user interface features. Please do not send us your bugs and suggestions for improvements until a more complete version is released.
The SSTV decoder algorithm is very FFT-intensive and has a large impact on the realtime response of the system. It seems possible to run one SSTV decoder, one WSPR decoder, GPS and some additional regular connections. But anything more than that is problematic (e.g. using it on a Kiwi with multiple WSPR auto-run tasks). So please be careful on which public Kiwis you use the SSTV extension.
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/cd/2f048ad299b8fa456686edfb028bcc.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/d8/5370a091d73a234cbc6d7b5dcc5cf1.png
The new SSTV extension is a very preliminary alpha release. It is mostly intended to facilitate development since there is essentially no live SSTV reception on our own Kiwis in NZ. Use the "Test image" button to decode a stored test pattern (deliberately slanted to test the alignment code)
There are many known problems and essentially no user interface features. Please do not send us your bugs and suggestions for improvements until a more complete version is released.
The SSTV decoder algorithm is very FFT-intensive and has a large impact on the realtime response of the system. It seems possible to run one SSTV decoder, one WSPR decoder, GPS and some additional regular connections. But anything more than that is problematic (e.g. using it on a Kiwi with multiple WSPR auto-run tasks). So please be careful on which public Kiwis you use the SSTV extension.
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/cd/2f048ad299b8fa456686edfb028bcc.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/d8/5370a091d73a234cbc6d7b5dcc5cf1.png
Comments
The SSTV decoder works pretty well.
Oona has some interesting stuff on her webpages, I had posted a link to her split band descrambler on another forum earlier this week.
Regards,
Martin - G8JNJ
Regards,
Martin - G8JNJ
Jari OH6BG
THX
I have been playing with the SSTV extension which is a useful new addition and generally works very well.
I find that the majority of SSTV traffic (or at least the most active frequency that can be heard most of the time) tends to be 14230KHz. Note that this is the suppressed carrier (dial) frequency
On that frequency the best filter bandwidth settings seem to be with the filter LF cutoff at frequency 700Hz and the HF cutoff at 2000Hz.
This gives some margin for the signals that are slightly off frequency, or who are using wider frequency shifts, and these settings may be useful for the SSTV frequency tab you have just added to the extension.
A manual start or reset button to force clear the decoder and get it to listen for tones would be useful, but only if / when you get around to it.
Thanks,
Martin - G8JNJ
I've been working on getting the Robot color modes to work because I've seen R24 and R36 modes being used, especially in the EU. And the existing code doesn't handle them properly.
The resulting images were good for comparing reception and although I've only so far been able to see things on 20m it's a faster (unattended) feedback loop than other methods. It's also good neck exercise try to work out what exactly I'm looking at on some images.