Ham Radio Software (original) (raw)

Ham Radio Software Utility programs for ham radio written in LabVIEW. LabVIEW, amateur radio, ham radio, software. Gan Uesli Starling 2019-2023, Gan Uesli Starling Free Plans & Software

Home: KY8D.net

Last updated: 2023-09-04

A list of project articles and various softwares I’ve authored. All these I built and/or coded for use by me. Everything I here share fore free. Source code and all, no strings attched. All completely without warantee.

List of Stand-Alone Pages

Here are links to each of my plans and softwares. Accept them with no strings attached for any purpose you might have in mind.

Homebrew Projects

Required for all calculatorsLVRTE

LabVIEW programs require an interpretor in order to run. Said interpreter is called the LabVIEW Run-Time Engine ... or LVRTE for short. For stand-alone use, you’ll need just only that. Going further, should you be so ambitious, you could instead choose to be installing the entire LabVIEW programming environment.

Download Menu

MS Windows

  1. LabVIEW Runtime Engine Version 2023Q3 (or newer), 32 bits
    • It’s totally free.
    • Select from download menu as shown at right: ☞
    • Install as Admin User, for all windows users. Thus to avoid Windows permission errors.
    • Needed to run anything LabVIEW. Same as if it were instead BASIC, Java, Python, or Perl.
  2. Community Edition
    • The complete programming environment!
    • Likewise totally free!
    • Fully as capable as the professional version.
    • View and edit my source code.
    • Write your own LabVIEW software.
    • Publish your own *.exe executables Linux

I now have the LabVIEW Community Edition, 64-bit running also on Ubuntu. This by way of fallback to Ubuntu’s own software installation system. Which I resorted to after repeatedly failing via the download hosted by National Instruments. While 64-bit is fine for the calculators, it is an issue with older DAQ hardware such as can be got at least somewhat cheaply on EBay.

Very probably, the National Instruments installer does work just fine for other flavors of Linux. As to that I have no way to know. If you should succeed, on Mint or some other, do please let me know.

Mac OS

National Instruments offers downloads also for Mac OS. Having no experience of Mac OS, I cannot vouch for it. You’ll just have to try it and see. Please let me know how that works if you do?

Learning LabVIEW

Now that the LabVIEW Community Edition is free to all, and it being fully as powerful as the professional version (although restricted for non-commercial use only), why not consider learning it? My various specialty calculators are just only scratching the surface. At work I’ve used LabVIEW for 17 years, controlling all manner of test equipment. I would go so far as to stay that anything Allen Bradley can do, LabVIEW does better. For certain, the programming is quicker. Anyhow, allow me to recommend a book: LabVIEW for Everyone.

Search for it on Amazon. An older edition is okay. I’ve had mine for years feel no need for updating to the latest.

Caveat Mutuum

Latin for “Let the moocher beware”. I designed this for me, and used it with glee. I share it here with you for free, but offered without even so much as the smell of a dead warrantee (or wheriot, as the case may be). Whatsoever disasters of cosmic proportion as may result from the use of this program, any and all culpability rests wholly and solely with the user.

Why Free?

Nothing sucks all the joy from a hobby faster than the taint of commercial expectations. Once, long ago, a handy utility which I had written got adopted into a version of Linux. That provided a nice warm glow which lasted some little while.
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