

I've been in conversation with other hams over the radio. Would it also be available in real-time or close to real-time, or would there be a substantial delay. But whether they can hear you depends on many factors, which I won't go into because there is another question (somewhere) that answers that here. If I'm going to be transmitting in California and I would like someone in New York, Peru, Greenland, etc., is it possible for them to listen? No guarantee, but I wouldn't say that it's highly unlikely. SDR technology makes it possible that all listeners tune independently, and thus listen to different signals this is in contrast to the many classical receivers that are already available via the internet." "A WebSDR is a Software-Defined Radio receiver connected to the internet, allowing many listeners to listen and tune it simultaneously. If someone wanted to listen to you, they would have to tune their Web SDR of choice to your frequency. However, they receive a wide band of frequencies.

Wouldn't the Internet gateway need to be setup for the same frequency I'm transmitting on and in the same area. It certainly is! Go have a listen there yourself. Is it possible for someone to use that to listen for my transmissions (over the Internet without needing a ham radio)?
Iowa echolink stations software#
All over the world, many amateur radio stations have connected software-defined-receivers (WebSDRs) to their computers, using software specifically designed for the purpose.
