The powder temp and ambient temp inputs would be the same if you acquired your muzzle velocity data contemporaneously. As you log new and different ambient temperature and corresponding muzzle velocities, you can then determine how your "muzzle velocity variation" with ambient temperature, usually recorded in fps / deg temperature; a 100 fps difference with a 20 deg difference would be 5 fps / deg. If you use the same ammo and get several different muzzle velocity variation-ambient temperature pairings you can establish a fairly accurate fps/deg change that can be entered in the ballistics software. THEN, when you are on the range with only knowing the current ambient temperature (and no new muzzle velocity acquired that day), the ballistics software will adjust with a corrected muzzle velocity, based on prior data, for your current station temperature.