On Sun, 2 Apr 2000, Greg Roberts wrote:
"I did some tracking last night and had my best night so far - only lost one satellite when it
went above 70 degrees elevation. Tracked another one, lost it near culmination but was able
to pick it up as it decreased elevation. One satellite I had to rely on the program to track as it
only gave a brief flash every minute or so - followed this satellite for 13 minutes. Another one
was a brilliant flasher with a period of about 1 second."
.... several software and hardware upgrades later ....
On Tue, 16 May 2000, Greg Roberts wrote:
"What a fantastic night - I didn't expect much with the full Moon but it may as well not have
been there. I got 16 satellites including several new ones. Your program worked without a
hitch and is indeed a big advance on your previous version. I tried two "impossible tracks" -
one at 75 degrees [culmination] and followed it all the way. Then I had one at 82 degrees and
followed it with no trouble. I also had two satellites go through nice fields and one even did
a nice flare in the field!"
If these two reports from my "beta tester", Greg Roberts don't wet your appetite for satellite tracking then I don't know what will. It was this enthusiastic kind of reporting that kept on encouraging me to improve the software while the continual achievement kept driving Greg to perfect his satellite tracking mount throughout the development of this joint project.
A typical system consists of three major components;
Although all the software is being distributed as Freeware, any donations towards all the hours of staring at the code will be welcome. Please e-mail me for particulars or if you want to suggest improvements or be alerted when an update gets released.
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