Rick:
Thank you very much indeed for continuing to maintain these
tools. They are extremely important to our maintaining a modern capability to
design, simulate, and build hardware for our projects.
Bob
ARRL
SDR Working Group Chair
Member:
ARRL, AMSAT, AMSAT-DL, TAPR, Packrats,
NJQRP,
QRP ARCI, QCWA, FRC.
"
Don't despair, not even over the fact that you don't despair. ", Kafka
From: advisors-bounces@amsat.org
[mailto:advisors-bounces@amsat.org] On Behalf Of Rick Hambly (W2GPS)
Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2008 11:23 AM
To: 'AMSAT Board of Directors'; senior-officers@amsat.org
Cc: 'AMSAT Eagle'; 'AMSAT Advisors'; officers@amsat.org; suitsat2@tapr.org
Subject: [Advisors] AMSAT's World Class Software Toolkits
All,
AMSAT has been maintaining a world class set of software
tools for RF design, antenna design, schematic capture, PCB layout and
auto-route, and FPGA/CPLD/etc. design. There are modules for special
purpose applications like high speed signal PCB design, simulation and
emulation. The capabilities are beyond want most of us could ever afford to
touch if it were not for AMSAT. These tools have been updated with the latest revisions
over the past week and new instructions have been prepared to help you find
them.
The purpose of making these tools available is EDUCATION.
This is arguably AMSAT’s most important mission. These tools are here for YOU
to become better educated by learning and using these tools. The only
restriction is that you use them only for AMSAT sponsored projects, one of
which is YOUR EDUCATION, so go ahead and use them to design your new Ham Shack
antenna, circuit board, or whatever. AMSAT sponsored projects include ARISS,
TAPR and HPSDR projects and may include others in the future.
The most important limitation is that these tools are not to
be used for personal commercial gain or on projects that are not sponsored by
AMSAT. So do not share the registration information with non-members
unless specifically authorized by the AMSAT President or his delegated
authority.
Attached are the instructions for getting the tools. The
licenses are controlled by a central server so you must be connected to the
Internet to use these tools. There are limits on the number of simultaneous
users permitted by each license, some as low as two at a time, others as high
as 20 at a time. I don’t expect that to be a problem.
These tools are worth many hundreds of thousands of dollars,
so what is the hitch? Any one suite of tools (sometimes called a “flow”)
is a major personal commitment to learn. For that reason I recommend locating
the various Webcasts that are available and teaming up with a partner. Why
would AMSAT put you through all this pain? Because AMSAT needs people who know
how to use these tools to design the next generation satellites.
Rick
W2GPS