filt
3 months ago
It seems like it refreshes from blank every time anyone joins or leaves the room. Which happens about once every half second. It leaves me too less time to write anything meaningful.
3 months ago
It seems like it refreshes from blank every time anyone joins or leaves the room. Which happens about once every half second. It leaves me too less time to write anything meaningful.
3 months ago
That is quite fun! Not a lot of people know morse code so there is a lot of QRM (man made interference).
It is amazing how good the human brain is picking out signal from the noise.
I did spot one other Ham a fellow Brit (G4) but didn't complete a QSO (a contact). 73 (kind regards) de M5NCW
3 months ago
That might have been me! There were one or two M stations there. I heard a couple of stations calling CQ. Very difficult to pick out signals without any filtering.
73 de G4IYT :)
3 months ago
Damn I wish i knew morse code. I have no idea what this mean hahaha
3 months ago
I have forgotten so much Morse code. I definitely need a decoder.
3 months ago
Very cool. It does get a bit chaotic when there are a number of people keying. If there was the ability to add a narrow filter then it could be usable for a QSO (radio contact)!
There are some other apps designed for having QSOs - VBand[1] and Vail Repeater[2].
Finally if you want to learn to use morse code on the air check out Long Island CW Club[3]
[1]: https://hamradio.solutions/vband/ [2]: https://vailmorse.com/ [3]: https://longislandcwclub.org/
3 months ago
Yeah, it'd be nice if you could click on user names to toggle the ability to receiver or ignore transmissions from those user(s).
3 months ago
Somewhat related, my iOS app[1] has a morse code reference and lets you train, it could be useful here.
Its backstory is also a bit silly, it started as the simplest app idea I could think of; I posted more about it recently[2].
[1]: https://apps.apple.com/app/simple-morse-tool/id873021583
3 months ago
Pretty neat. It would be cool if it had an automatic decoder
3 months ago
This is good fun - any way of getting the alphabet on the screen for quick reference?
3 months ago
Yes, Google images :)
3 months ago
I had a blast with this. I got Claude to write a function for encoding a string to Morse and sending it, and then a patch that displays a 10-character rolling display next to the name of other users. From what I can tell with zero Morse code experience, most users are just sending random characters by accident.
I was pretty pleased to see it work when I ran two windows side-by-side, called `sendMorse('never gonna give you up')` in one window, and then watched it roll through the display on the other window.
Code here, if you'd like to try the same thing: https://gist.github.com/epiccoleman/58560a6469a163050f7aa888...
3 months ago
Thats layer 0 let's build a TCP stack on it.
3 months ago
I think it's not accurate. It missed a beat
3 months ago
Fun! Would be nice to have an automatic translator built in, or already the alphabet.
Btw, for emacs users, there is a `morse-region` and `unmorse-region` https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/MorseCode to play with
3 months ago
I am really surprised people aren't using WebSockets for absolutely everything at this point. The only strength to HTTP is that its session-less, which is convenient for one off data requests that prefer anonymity without authentication.
3 months ago
I called CQ for a bit but nobody on at the time seemed to know Morse. Neat idea though, and with the different tones for different users it would be possible to overcome the background noise of people playing around.
3 months ago
Very cool! I built something similar a long time ago: https://morse.halb.it and it blows my mind that it's actually being used by people
3 months ago
One suggestion might be to highlight the last letter received in the chart. If the user clicks on one of the other user names, then only transmissions from that user should be decoded.
3 months ago
Not so much a communication tool but more like a realtime music collab one :)
Feels like a meeting on a remote island shore where nobody understands each other's language, but it's still hella fun :)
4 months ago
That’s awesome that you can see everyone’s at once. Cool design.
3 months ago
3 months ago
This is nice.
Another fun one is this one: https://www.telegraphsimulator.com
3 months ago
Really nice graphic design. If you build it out more, maybe you can teach users Morse code. Maybe a toggle button for decoding the dots and dashes.
3 months ago
If you're interested in learning morse, there's a great app for Android, "Morse Mania: Learn Morse Code" from which I learned. It's surprisingly easy to pick up the basics but requires a good bit of practice to be able to parse it in real time.
3 months ago
Thanks for all the feedback! I added a few of your feature requests :) will try to fix bugs and add some more over the weekend
3 months ago
This is neat despite having the annoying reset bug, would be cool to practice my CW skills on this.
3 months ago
That is super cool and fun. Well done. :)
3 months ago
looks great! i need something like this for my retro video game project
4 months ago
Genius !!
3 months ago
Better add a profanity filter quick. /s
3 months ago
Ha ha! I did notice one use of the F-word. Then again if you understand Morse code you are probably happy to hear anything you understand in the chaos!