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Re: [CQ-Contest] What software to use...

To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] What software to use...
From: Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: k9yc@arrl.net
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2022 14:07:39 -0800
List-post: <mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
On 1/22/2022 12:53 PM, N9GG via CQ-Contest wrote:
I welcome your comments and suggestions.

I've been contesting since 1957, mostly CD parties and SS. I was on and off the air for decades at a time until getting back on for good in 2003. That was at a FD I visited, and they were using WriteLog, so I bought it and learned it.

Around 2007-8, the organizer of a FD team I was joining announced a few months before that we would use N1MM, so I installed it and started using it for a few contests. It wasn't long before I'd decided that I found it a lot more user-friendly, and by SS-SSB that year, I had made the switch. I've not looked back.

Comfort with contest logging software is STRONGLY dependent on having developed "muscle memory" with its operation, and knowledge of its "gotchas." I use ESM mode exclusively; one thing you have to know is that if you've sent (or started sending) an exchange once, you've got to revert to F-keys for His Call and Report.

Another thing that's critical is setting up F-Key files that make sense for the way you operate. My standard for most contests is that F1 is a "quickie" CQ, like "SS K9YC", F2 is the exchange, F3 is TU K9YC, F4 is My Call, F5 is his call, F7 is a 1 x 1 CQ, F8 is 1 x2, F11 is Wipe (to clear the entry window). The remaining keys are programmed for common fills. That's for the primary "Running" mode; for S&P, F3 simply logs the QSO. One thing I like about N1MM Plus is how easy it is to edit F-Key files and save them with names that N1MM Plus will, by default, pull them up the next time you start that same contest a year later. And there's a Tab in the contest setup for choosing from any that you have generated.

What I DON'T like are N1MM's default F-Key files -- I view them as a train wreck.

WriteLog and N1MM are both great for exporting adif to my main logging program, which is DXKeeper. I don't remember WriteLog's Cabrillo function, but N1MM's is excellent. N1MM's doc (pdf manual) is great; at the time I was learning WriteLog, the "manual" was a long email from the developer.

Our team for CQP, 7QP, and FD uses N1MM and I'm the computer setup guy, but we have at least one great op on every operation who is primarily a WriteLog user. At the beginning of each operation, I need to remind them of how N1MM works. It's all "muscle memory" that we take for granted when running our own logger.

73, Jim K9YC
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