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Re: [TowerTalk] NEC 5.0 ???

To: "chuck.gooden" <chuck.gooden@comcast.net>, towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] NEC 5.0 ???
From: Artek Manuals <Manuals@ArtekManuals.com>
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 2021 20:03:22 -0500
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Chuck

The person I spoke to at LLL said the  $110 includes an Individual ( non commercial use) license , a copy of the "Windows Executable" and the manual to go with it

You can still get 4.2 if you want it $300 of an individual license, and a copy of the "source code". You then I guess have to write you own GUI and compile it or shell out $675 to W7EL net out of pocket $975

I ll probably spring for the $110 and hope the "windows executable" is useful to us mere mortals

Dave

On 3/11/2021 7:08 PM, chuck.gooden wrote:
Was the cost of $110.00 the cost for the software  or the cost of the manual?  
I thought the software was much more.
-------- Original message --------From: "Lux, Jim" <jim@luxfamily.com> Date: 3/11/21  5:50 PM  (GMT-06:00) To: towertalk@contesting.com Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] NEC 5.0 ??? On 3/11/21 12:15 PM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:>>>>> "Jerry Burke, the primary author of the antenna-modeling software 
NEC,>> died on February 14. He had been suffering from cancer. NEC (numerical>> electromagnetics code) evolved out of a program called BRACT, which>> Burke and others developed in 1967. The most common public version is>> NEC-2. -- Thanks to Jim Breakall, WA3FET">>>> I didn't realize that the 
roots of NEC went back this far.> Jerry produced amazing results especially considering what he> had to work with in 1967 (IBM 360, keypunch, line printer, etc).> Probably written in the wonderful language of Fortran.> Those were the days.Probably more likely a CDC 6600 or 7600, when those became available - Those were the 
big iron for numerical computation back then (60 bit single precision).  That's what I was using from around 1974 to 1980 at various places.   But yes, keypunch, lineprinter, maybe a RJE terminals.https://computing.llnl.gov/history shows them getting a 7600 in 69, in addition to the 7600 they got in '64 (which replaced 
the IBM 7030) (it was Serial number 1)NEC2.f (from 1980)C     PROGRAM NEC(INPUT,TAPE5=INPUT,OUTPUT,TAPE11,TAPE12,TAPE13,TAPE14,C 1TAPE15,TAPE16,TAPE20,TAPE21)CC     NUMERICAL ELECTROMAGNETICS CODE (NEC2)  DEVELOPED AT LAWRENCEC     LIVERMORE LAB., LIVERMORE, CA.  
(CONTACT G. BURKE AT 415-422-8414C     FOR PROBLEMS WITH THE NEC CODE.  FOR PROBLEMS WITH THE VAX IMPLEM-C     ENTATION, CONTACT J. BREAKALL AT 415-422-8196 OR E. DOMNING AT 415C     422-5936)C     FILE CREATED 4/11/80.The VAX 11/780 came out very late 
in the 70s (I was doing heavy systems development on a multiprocessor PDP-11/70 in 1979, and we wished we had one - I actually got my hands on one in probably 1980-81)NEC had been around for a while by then.There are some interesting papers/conference presentations by Jerry, etc on the history of 
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