- My BSc. thesis written on OpenWebRX is <ahref="http://openwebrx.org/bsc-thesis.pdf">available here.</a>
- Several bugs were fixed to improve reliability and stability.
- OpenWebRX now supports compression of audio and waterfall stream, so the required network uplink bandwidth has been decreased from 2 Mbit/s to about 200 kbit/s per client! (Measured with the default settings. It is also dependent on `fft_size`.)
[SDR.hu](http://sdr.hu) is a site which lists the active, public OpenWebRX servers. Your receiver [can also be part of it](http://sdr.hu/openwebrx), if you want.
> By the way, *nmap* is a tool commonly used for auditing network security, and it is not used by OpenWebRX in any way. We need to install it, because the *ncat* command is packaged with it.
> *ncat* is a better *netcat* alternative, which is used by OpenWebRX for internally distributing the I/Q data stream. It also solves the problem of having different versions of *netcat* on different Linux distributions, which are not compatible by their command-line arguments.
If you have any problems installing OpenWebRX, you should check out the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki">Wiki</a> about it, which has a page on the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki/Common-problems-and-their-solutions">common problems and their solutions</a>.
OpenWebRX is available under Affero GPL v3 license (<ahref="https://tldrlegal.com/license/gnu-affero-general-public-license-v3-(agpl-3.0)">summary</a>).
OpenWebRX is also available under a commercial license on request. Please contact me at the address *<randras@sdr.hu>* for other licensing options.