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			32 lines
		
	
	
		
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			32 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
// Status=review
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The _WSJT_ project was started by *K1JT* in 2001.  Since 2005 it has
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been an Open Source project, which now includes the programs _WSJT_,
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_MAP65_, _WSPR_, _WSJT-X_, and _WSPR-X_.  *G4WJS* (since 2013) and
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*K9AN* (since 2015) have made major contributions to _WSJT-X_.
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Together with K1JT they now form the core development team.
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All code in the _WSJT_ project is licensed under the GNU Public
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License (GPL).  Many users of these programs, too numerous to mention
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here individually, have contributed suggestions and advice that have
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greatly aided the development of _WSJT_ and its sister programs.  For
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_WSJT-X_ in particular, we acknowledge contributions from *AC6SL,
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AE4JY, DJ0OT, G3WDG, G4KLA, IV3NWV, IW3RAB, K3WYC, KA6MAL, KA9Q,
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KB1ZMX, KD6EKQ, KI7MT, KK1D, ND0B, PY2SDR, VE1SKY, VK3ACF, VK4BDJ,
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VK7MO, W4TI, W4TV, and W9MDB*.  Each of these amateurs has helped to
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bring the program’s design, code, testing, and/or documentation to its
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present state.
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Most of the color palettes for the _WSJT-X_ waterfall were copied from
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the excellent, well documented, open-source program _fldigi_, by *W1HKJ*
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and friends.
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We use development tools and libraries from many sources.  We
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particularly wish to acknowledge importance of the GNU Compiler
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Collection from the Free Software Foundation, the "clang" compiler
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from LLVM at the University of Illinois, and the Qt Project from Digia
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PLC.  Other important resources include the FFTW library by Matteo
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Frigo and Steven G. Johnson; SLALIB, the Positional Astronomy Library
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by P. T.  Wallace; and a high-precision planetary ephemeris and
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associated software from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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