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Posted in Radio Hacks Tagged arduino, cq, keyer, morse code, servo, straight key ← Building A Rather Rudimentary Arduino Tank Bot Turning A Raspberry Pi Into An SNES → ...
Without one of the keys to tap your message, you’re left with dead air. Morse code keys don’t come cheap, so Roberts started making them himself. “It’s all about function and design,” he ...
Continue reading “Translating And Broadcasting Spoken Morse Code”→ Posted in Radio Hacks Tagged amateur, continuous wave, cw, ham, key, morse, morse code, radio, verbal, voice, vox ...
Martin Kaltenbrunner’s Tworse Key is an Arduino-powered Morse code translator that outputs your taps to Twitter.
The Tworse Key is an open design exercise in interface archaeology, that decodes the input from a classic Morse key to send twitter messages. Providing a fully self contained Twittering morse code ...
Your iPhone now does Morse code, thanks to Google's Gboard keyboard Morse code only uses two symbols (dots and dashes), making it an easy way for people with limited mobility to communicate.
Wink Wingender, 57, of Glen Burnie, worked Morse code keys on weather ships and at shore stations from 1954 until 1967. The end of the era “makes me sad,” he said. “Code was reliable.
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