>There is much much more that could be done to make the human interface of
>SDRs more "tuned" for contesting.  One aspect of that is the ergonomics of
>using the computer for both SDR and other functions (N1MM et al) at the
>same time.   But another aspect is having contesting software that takes
>advantage of the underlying capabilities of SDRs to do things for
>contesters that can't be readily done with non-SDR hardware.
>One example --- Even the simpler and cheaper SDRs like my Flex-3000 or the
>-1500 are continuously receiving a wide chunk of spectrum (50 to 100 KHz).
 > The newest radios are in theory capable of continuously receiving *all*
>of the HF bands at the same time.   So everything that any station sent on
>any frequency is inside the computer sitting on your desk. Operators today
>can pick out one or two signals from that spectrum and listen to it.  But
>*all* of the signals are inside the computer, all of the time, and the
>computer has enough memory to keep them there for minutes or even hours.
>What could contesters do with that?  More specifically, what could
>contesting software do with that capability?
I discussed all of this in my May/June 2013 NCJ article on SDR's and 
contesting- there
are some neat things you can do to highlight signals that you haven't worked. 
I use SDR quite a bit in my operating. My setup is two Elecraft K3's, with 
simple
audio-derived (LP-PAN) SDR's running on the IF's. This gives you the best of 
two worlds-
knobs and controls when you need them, and a wideband display to find signals. 
It is 
also cheap. It has changed the way I operate- for example I mostly use the 
mouse or 
keyboard for selecting stations while in S&P, this is more efficient than 
tuning with a knob.
But you need to write software from the beginning that supports this way of 
operating- you 
will simply never get all the benefits by putting together a regular logging 
program and 
a typical SDR control/panadapter program. My SO2SDR logging program integrated 
with 
SDR is  available at
https://code.google.com/p/so2sdr/  ; or
https://github.com/n4ogw/so2sdr
I recommend running SO2SDR under Linux if you can- I have made a Windows port, 
but 
don't really use it myself. I have no idea if a Flex can work  with SO2SDR-I 
don't own one 
and have never used a Flex (too much $$$). Can you run two Flex radios SO2R on
a single computer?
Tor
N4OGW/5
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