Sorry:
Nonsense. The ability to talk via ham radio overseas, Norway. etc., is
"indeed unique" when you can consider that no hardware corporate, nor
any other, infrastructure is necessary to achieve the task. Shut down
the cell-phone infrastructure and/or the Internet and communications
stops. Ham radio communications cannot be shut down without broad
spectrum high power jamming. Ham radio communications would continue.
And that, may I suggest, is what makes "ham radio" so special. I don't
need anything other than the "ether" between my rig and the other guy/gal.
Jozef WB2MIC
Cathy James wrote:
W2AGN wrote:
"The term "Ham Radio" has been used at least for 75 years, possibly
more. Most of us "old-timers" are proud to be Hams. But then, we took
"real" exams and even, back in the olden days, had to pass a Morse
Code test. (After walking barefoot in the snow 5 miles to the FCC
examiner, of course).
"Perhaps the term "Ham Radio" has become outmoded, with the new trends
in Amateur Radio, no more code test, memorized exams, etc. So maybe we
should "repackage" ourselves.
"I know! Why don't we call it "Citizen's Band?" (CB for short)."
John, I know you are using some irony here ("barefoot in the
snow..."), and I don't offend easily, but I have to same that we "new"
hams (first licensed 1991 in my case) get a little tired of the
endless litany of "you young whippersnippers ain't as good as us" that
is often heard from old-timers on the Net. (Interesting, I don't
think I've ever heard it in person or on the air. I don't use 75
meters, and it doesn't seem to be common on other bands.)
I mean, c'mon, I have an engineering degree (albeit not EE), an
Extra, routinely ragchew at 16-18 wpm CW, my shack is full of kits
I've built, I build complex antennas from scratch (two Moxons so far),
and I'm studying RF theory as time permits in hope of eventually
designing and building my own rigs. Yet there is a group of hams that
will never consider me their equal because I didn't take the same exam
they did in front of an FCC examiner and never passed a CW test higher
than 5 wpm. Give it a rest!
NZ0R wrote:
"In terms of its reputation and usefulness, ham radio seems stuck in
the 50's
to me. Technology-wise it's pretty up-to-date but for the most part
it's a
quaint throwback to simpler times. The name "ham" may be odd and
embarrassing, but people do know what it means."
Craig, I fully agree that in many ways ham radio is stuck in the
1950's. I'm not quite sure why or what to do about it. The world has
changed, the culture has changed, and we have to change with it or we
will disappear. Certainly the ability to talk to someone in Norway or
New Zealand is no longer unique with the rise of the Internet, and
cellphones have replaced some of the uses of HT's and other VHF
operations. We need to focus on the things that can't be done in
consumer-land, such as building and tinkering with hardware and
software, experimenting at the edge of today's knowledge, and
providing emergency services.
N5IB wrote:
"Our Louisiana call letter plates have the legend "Ham Operator."
Very interesting! I've lived in many states and traveled through
most, and the vast majority use "Amateur Radio" on their license plates.
Cathy
N5WVR
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