Daily Digest

Just arrived home from GW/NW-007, and find 4 Daily Digests, timed this afternoon, in my mail. Am I the only one, or is this a common occurence?

Regards, Dave, G6DTN

In reply to M0DFA:
yes - here too , Dave. How was your day out?
David M0YDH

In reply to M0YDH:
How was your day out?

A very good day, thank you, David. Last Friday, on GW/NW-015 (from Cwm Cywarch) I could only manage Naismith + 20 minutes on the ascent. I put this down to an hour or so in the local swimming pool on the day before, but there is the little thought (I’m not that young - a G6 call) that it may be just a bit more serious. Today, from the same start point, I did Naismith - 15 minutes to GW/NW-007, so it was the swimming. Not very busy (17 QSOs in total) but 4 S2S and one of those on the key.

Regards, Dave, G6DTN

In reply to M0DFA:

Hi Dave,

This was also due to a hacking attempt on SOTAwatch yesterday. The script that sends out the digest was triggered a few times.

73, Jon

In reply to M0DFA:
Thanks for the Friday CW S2S with me on Cadair Idris. You’ll get hooked! :o)

I had seen your alert, and did tune around for you on 40m and 20m, but I was late arriving on summit, and thought I had missed you. It was really good to hear you calling me on 30m.

Maybe I should engage with Naismith, then my timings might improve ;o)

Regards
Adrian
G4AZS

In reply to GM4ZFZ:

Move to a LAMP (Linux + Apache + MySQL + PHP) system, and you’ll get far fewer attacks. My $0.02…

Rob

In reply to DM1CM:

a LAMP

Just as well as that’s what it uses! :wink:

Andy
MM0FMF

In reply to DM1CM:

Move to a LAMP (Linux + Apache + MySQL + PHP) system, and you’ll get
far fewer attacks.

Move to a CP/M system and you’ll get none.

73 de G3NYY

In reply to G3NYY:

Move to a CP/M system and you’ll get none

Of course a highly secure system! And information about spots and upcoming activations will be exchanged via floppy discs and traditional mail.
Seems that activators then have to stay a long time on the summits to get their qualifying QSOs :slight_smile:

Quote:
CP/M is an extremely secure system. It relies on the physical security methodology. You store the operating systems, programs, and private date on 5-1/4" floppies. You want to use them, put them in the machine. No one can get to your data from the outside through a network because CP/M has no network

73 Stephan, DM1LE