Re: sight in here for there
I am curious as to what cartridge you are shooting which will launch a 168 grain .30 caliber bullet at 3300 feet per second.
In any case, I ran this problem through my copy of Exbal. I used the assumption that you zeroed at 300 yards in standard conditions, i.e., temperature of 59 degrees F., BP 29.92 inches, and 78 percent relative humidity.
I told Exbal to remember those conditions. Then I told it you have moved to 10,000 feet, and to calculate the standard conditions at altitude, which resulted in a temperature of 23 degrees, a little warmer than you specified, but that's OK.
Exbal shows that your zero will be about an inch high at 300 yards, and that you will need about 1.25 MOA less on a 600 yard shot than you would at sea level in standard conditions.
A change of 1.25 MOA at 600 yards is a difference of about 8 inches.
So, I would just go with what you have, and hold a little low on the target as you get out past 500 yards.
You can do the same exercise if you want using JBM, and see what it says, although JBM doesn't have the ability to remember the sight-in conditions.
As long as you're not shooting past 600 yards, you shouldn't see a great difference.