__ __ ______ _____ ________ __ __ | \ _ | \ / \ | \| \ | \ | \ | $$ / \ | $$| $$$$$$\ \$$$$$ \$$$$$$$$ | $$ | $$ | $$/ $\| $$| $$___\$$ | $$ | $$ ______ \$$\/ $$ | $$ $$$\ $$ \$$ \ __ | $$ | $$| \ >$$ $$ | $$ $$\$$\$$ _\$$$$$$\| \ | $$ | $$ \$$$$$$/ $$$$\ | $$$$ \$$$$| \__| $$| $$__| $$ | $$ | $$ \$$\ | $$$ \$$$ \$$ $$ \$$ $$ | $$ | $$ | $$ \$$ \$$ \$$$$$$ \$$$$$$ \$$ \$$ \$$ Thanks to: The FFTW library (http://www.fftw.org) without which the efficient generation of discrete fast Fourier transformations essential to the decoding DSP algorithms of WSJT-X would be a considerable part of the project. The Qt project (http://qt-project.org) that allows us to deliver a rich industrial strength cross platform GUI application written in C++. Nate Bargmann, N0NB, and the Hamlib developer team for their excellent library and for prompt review and acceptance of the many pull requests for upstream patches to Hamlib. Dave Bernstein, AA6YQ, for being so receptive to suggestions allowing WSJT-X to cooperate with his excellent Amateur Radio DX and award chasing suite (http://www.dxlabsuite.com). Laurie Cowcher, VK3AMA, for developing the partner applications JTAlertX and JTMacrosX (http://www.hamapps.com) that make DX chasing with WSJT-X such an efficient and pleasurable experience. The CMake build and packaging tools (http://www.cmake.org) for their comprehensive scripting tools that make automation of building and packaging on all supported platforms possible. The NSIS MS Windows installer scripting and generator tools (http://nsis.sourceforge.net) that, through the CPack NSIS generator, allows us to build a comprehensive Windows installer package. The GNU Compiler Collection (http://gcc.gnu.org) that allows us to compile and link C++, Fortran and C code to the latest Standards and with high quality optimization. The clang C++ & C compiler front ends and LLVM compiler back end tools (http://clang.llvm.org) that provide us with another, gcc compatible, high quality C++ and C compiler and Standard Library suite which, particularly on Apple Mac, allows our code to be ported to the maximum number of platforms. The MinGW project (http://www.mingw.org) that ports the gcc compilers and related GNU tools to the MS Windows environment allowing a high quality C++, Fortran and C application to be portable between native MS Windows and other platforms such as Linux and Apple Mac.