Ameba Ownd

アプリで簡単、無料ホームページ作成

Timewave one software

2022.01.14 16:36


->>>> Click Here to Download <<<<<<<-





















Note: TZ drivers can be found here. Timewave Technology assumes no responsibility for software manufactured by other companies. Use this if the online drivers do not install. For the latest driver, go to Silicon Laboratories. CPx Driver 6. This is the latest tested driver for the TZ Newer versions are available. Timewave does NOT guarentee untested drivers. CPx Driver 5. This is included in the standard Linux kernel build.


I'd be tempted also to try a Linux distro, if there's something that works well in that. I'd like this to be a APRS setup and digi-peater, and at least do some basic packet check-ins on the county club server. K3RW , Feb 26, N2JAI likes this. I've used both minicom linux and PuTTy with the I never did anything fancy with it, so any kind of terminal emulator worked fine. KL7AJ , Feb 26, KA2FIR likes this.


K3RW likes this. With putty or any character terminal, you can run the ' in every mode, except wefax. They never published the presumably binary protocol for that. Should be straightforward, but I haven't looked at it yet. If you want to run the classic windows 3. K6CLS , Feb 27, In or earlier Royce Kelley and Leon Taylor were recruited by Terence McKenna and calculated the wave as 64 tables of terms each. In the Acknowledgements in the edition of The Invisible Landscape we read The material in the appendices is their work, as are illustrations One of the appendices contains a table of lines, later known as the "Table of Intermediate and Final Values".


This provides a set of numbers in the range 0 - 79 which used to be known in the jargon of Timewave Zero as the "data points" which were taken by later researchers as primitive values from which the fractal timewave was generated. The quotation above states that this table was made originally either by Royce Kelley or by Leon Taylor or both. The edition of The Invisible Landscape contains some FORTRAN source code which is, unfortunately, mostly illegible, and presumably one or both of Kelley and Taylor wrote this code no other copy of which is known to survive.


The program was written in Applesoft BASIC and proceeded from some earlier, preliminary and incomplete, code by an unknown programmer. Peter Broadwell's version was the first actually to display the wave graphically. At this point, however, little manipulation of the wave display was possible.


During the late s knowledge of the Timewave began to cross the Atlantic. The first European known to have studied The Invisible Landscape was Klaus Scharff, a teacher of mathematics and physics, whose main theoretical interest was, and remains, the nature of time see his Chronolytisches Studio.


He thought correctly that the derivation of the values from the King Wen Sequence , as described therein, was rather obscure.


Soon after, basing his work on the information in Appendix II of the book, and taking the values as primitive, he wrote a program in Pascal which successfully displayed the timewave in a graphical form.


Klaus Scharff also found numerous interesting correspondences between the ups and downs of the timewave and historical events. I was first exposed to the theory of the Timewave when in a friend of mine gave me a copy of the original edition of The Invisible Landscape. I first met Terence McKenna in California in the summer of while visiting Occidental where he lived at the time, on Bohemian Highway, with his wife Kat.