[Dx-qsl] My QSL Service

w4sco at sco-inc.org w4sco at sco-inc.org
Mon Nov 26 11:59:05 EST 2007


eQSL expects the user to upload an ADIF log file ... not images of real
cards. In my system the user has full and complete control over what is
on their qsl card. With eQSL they control what is displayed on the end
card. All we do is to store and forward your cards for you.
Les W4SCO
www.scoincsoftware.com
 -------- Original Message --------
 Subject: RE: [Dx-qsl] My QSL Service
 From: "Ron Notarius W3WN" <wn3vaw at verizon.net>
 Date: Mon, November 26, 2007 7:03 am
 To: <dx-qsl at mailman.qth.net>
 
 Sounds exactly like eQSL.
 
 -----Original Message-----
 From: dx-qsl-bounces at mailman.qth.net
 [mailto:dx-qsl-bounces at mailman.qth.net]On Behalf Of w4sco at sco-inc.org
 Sent: Monday, November 26, 2007 3:00 AM
 To: dx-qsl at mailman.qth.net
 Subject: [Dx-qsl] My QSL Service
 
 
 Fellow hams,
 
 I have a new qsl service that i hope you will look at and adopt. I made
 my DXCC Millenium award in 2000 because I did not need to wait for my
 cards to show that i had worked at least 100 countries. I am still
 waiting today for many of those cards so I can apply for the "normal"
 DXCC award.
 
 The rise in postage prices means that now it cost me almost 1ドル to send
 out a qsl card to a foreign country on the DXCC list. I usually include
 1ドル-2 dollars cash (with each card) to help the foreign ham pay his
 postage to me. After i do all that i must wait months or even years for
 my card in the mail.
 
 I thought of a better way that is faster and much less expensive. It
 uses the internet. First i fill out my outgoing qsl card, then I scan
it
 as a jpg file. Next I upload it to my new qsl service at
 http://myqsl.cc. When I upload the file i tell the system the Callsign
 of the recipient, for each card. When the recipient logs on (provided
 they are registered with the system) they are told and shown if they
 have any qsl cards waiting for them in their folder. If they do they
can
 look at them but must pay me 4ドル.95 per year if they wish to download
any
 of them. After they download their cards they then can print them out
on
 their own local inkjet printer on card stock.
 
 Most hams today (and in the future) will have an inkjet printer and
many
 of those also have a scanning capability.
 
 This idea is no different than if you prepare a card at your qth...
 Print it out on your printer, fill in the other ham's qso details, then
 put that card into an envelope and post it to them. Or you use a card
 prepared for you at a printer then add your qso details and mail it.
The
 only difference with my system is that you prepare your outgoing cards
 but instead of putting them into envelopes, you scan them as jpg files
 and upload them to my system. There the other ham downloads your
"cards"
 and prints them on their printer (instead of on your printer). We
merely
 substituted ourselves for the post office in delivering the cards for
 you.
 
 Try my new QSL service at http://myqsl.cc and let me know how you like
 it. There is no charge to upload cards or to "view" cards waiting for
 you.
 
 Les W4SCO
 www.scoincsoftware.com
 
 
 
 
 &quot;Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've
got...till
 it's gone.&quot; from Big Yellow Taxi (Joni Mitchell) but also true
about
 QSL.NET if more users don't open their wallets and help financially.
Please
 contribute TODAY !!
 
 
 &quot;Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've
got...till it's gone.&quot; from Big Yellow Taxi (Joni Mitchell) but
also true about QSL.NET if more users don't open their wallets and help
financially. Please contribute TODAY !!
 


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