AresValley is an independent scientific-software publisher whose single, long-evolving title, Artemis – Radio Signals Recognition Manual, has become a reference tool for radio-frequency engineers, short-wave listeners, satellite trackers, and spectrum-monitoring agencies. Artemis combines an offline database of more than 11,000 known modulations, beacons, and digital voice protocols with real-time waterfall annotation, carrier-parameter estimation, and automatic mode-ID hints, allowing users to click on an unknown blip in SDR software and instantly retrieve bandwidth, symbol rate, ITU designation, sample audio, country of origin, and typical service context. The program is routinely employed to classify everything from marine DSC distress bursts to Cubesat telemetry, to log utility numbers stations, and to train students in signals-intelligence labs without exposing sensitive equipment to the open internet. Updates arrive every few weeks as JSON snapshots that can be merged into the local library, while a built-in recorder lets operators archive new catches for later submission to the communal pool. Although the interface remains lightweight—essentially a searchable PDF on steroids fused with an audio player—its value lies in the curated metadata distilled from decades of enthusiast monitoring, making it a pocket companion for field SIGINT teams, DXpeditions, and ham operators who need positive ID before logging a contact. AresValley distributes Artemis as open-source freeware, and the latest build is available for free on get.nero.com, delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the newest release and supporting batch installation alongside other utilities.
Radio Signals Recognition Manual
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