I'd love to hear and learn more about getting governments grant(s) for
D-Star. What can you (anyone) who knows about this share. Not speculation
but actual knowlege about this - thanks,

 

Donald

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Nate Duehr
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2010 4:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [DSTAR_DIGITAL] Are you exprerencing anti d-star in your area?

 

  


On Jul 12, 2010, at 2:02 AM, Nate Duehr wrote:

> All it takes to grow D-STAR (or any other new mode in any particular area)
is time and money... D-STAR has flourished in some areas due to massive
influxes of taxpayer dollars in the form of government grants... some local,
some Federal. in other areas, it's alive but weak... and in still others,
it's not doing anything at all.

Clarification: This was meant to be worded in such a way as to say it's very
much flourishing in some areas, mediocre in others, and low in still others.
And of course, there's also places where it's flourishing where large sums
of personal monies have been spent on it, not just the government money
areas... that sentence was badly worded.

The point here was... it takes a lot of $ to change out infrastructure, no
matter what mode or type it is... and in a recession, it's not going to grow
at super-fast rates in most areas, but in areas where there's interest/money
to do it, it took off, for sure.

Once someone buys/builds the infrastructure, users show up at a pretty good
clip, usually. Then it tapers off. I see about 4 registration requests a
month in the area now.

We're one of the "medium interest/money" areas, and it wouldn't have really
gotten off the ground without donated repeaters to kick-start it. That led
to some locals donating a few thousand dollars worth of duplexer, feedline,
antennas, and tower space.

Now there's a couple more on the air. One off of grant money, two privately
funded...

It still doesn't have a ton of "traction", but we do have over 100
registered users... so we're square in the middle of the bell-curve.

Basically growth of repeater networks comes down to either having a
"sugar-daddy" who'll buy a lot of stuff... or government money... or a large
enough club/organization to "spread the load" of the up-front infrastructure
costs... once that part's handled, it's just about time and effort to get it
on the air.

--
Nate Duehr, WY0X
[email protected] <mailto:nate%40natetech.com> 



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