The format is S16LE or S32LE I/Q samples. Thus there are 4 or 8 bytes per sample. Depending on sample size I and Q values are 16 bit signed integers for 16 bit sample size or 32 bit signed integers for 24 bit sample size. The file starts with a context header containing information about center frequency, sample rate and timestamp of the start of the recording. This header has a length which is a multiple of a sample size (normally 32 bytes thus 8 32-bit samples). Thus this file can be used as a raw I/Q file with S16LE samples tolerating a glitch at the start corresponding to the 8 "random" samples. For example in GNURadio you can simply specify your file source format as short complex.
To convert in another format you may use the sox utility. For example to convert to 32 bit (float) complex samples do: `sox -r 48k -b 16 -e signed-integer -c 2 myfile.raw -e float -c 2 myfilec.raw`
This is the file stream sample rate in kS/s after interpolation (4) from the baseband stream. Thus this is the sample rate (7) multiplied by the interpolation factor (6).
Use the wheels to adjust the sample rate. Left click on a digit sets the cursor position at this digit. Right click on a digit sets all digits on the right to zero. This effectively floors value at the digit position. Wheels are moved with the mousewheel while pointing at the wheel or by selecting the wheel with the left mouse click and using the keyboard arrows. Pressing shift simultaneously moves digit by 5 and pressing control moves it by 2.