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1994-04-23
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51 lines
╔═════════════╗
║ Radio ║
╚══════╦══════╝
║ Named with IRQ, Port Address, sub-channel
║ <───────── Hardware: RS-232 Cable, KISS protocol data
║ Named with BPQ port numbers
║ Many users per port
╔══════╩══════╗
║ Hardware ║
║ Driver ║<─── Software: BPQCODE
╚══════╦══════╝
║
╔══════╩══════╗
║ Switch ║
║ AX.25 ║<─── Software: BPQCODE
╚══════╦══════╝
║
╔══════╩══════╗
║ Switch ║<─── Software: BPQCODE
║ NET/ROM ║
╚══════╦══════╝
║
╔══════╩══════╗
║ Switch ║<─── Software: YTNC, BPQCODE
║ Interface ║
╚══════╦══════╝
║ Named with "COM" port number
║ Named with MailBox port letter
║ <───────── Software: One user per port, any radio.
║ "Virtual TNC"
╔══════╩══════╗
║ MailBox ║
╚═════════════╝
Here is a server that will save your bpq node list:
In desqview create a Program Information File for Bpqnodes.com. Set it
to run in a 12k window.
In cron.mb, add the entry:
From 0 to 23 each 60 at 10 run S1 (or whatever the DV keys for the file
you created are.)
This means that each 60 minutes at minute 10 the PIF file will execute
and run bpqnodes.com saving your nodes information.