Henrik Klemetz wrote: > Having moved to a location where there is much local > QRM, I have had to quite SW and MW DXing doing instead > some internet listening and reporting (Radio Prague, > The Voice of the Mediterranean, XERTA, Radio > Panamericana...) Sometimes the reception quality is > AOK, sometimes it is lousy, as in the El Salvador case > related in DXLD #3118. I don't feel ashamed at all to > say that I have received several replies, usually by > email, but also by letter, in some cases QSL cards, > pens and other stuff.
I don't see any harm in doing this as long as you are honest about doing it, as Henrik is. It depends what you want out of the hobby. Some people, including a well-known gentleman down under, insist that DXing is a technical hobby and that comments on programmes etc. have no place in it. But for many people, the technical part was always a means to an end - i.e. receiving audio from as many different broadcasters as possible. I'm sure the small Latin American broadcasters who stream on the Web are as delighted to get letters from Internet listeners abroad as they are to get reception reports on their radio signals. Potential advertisers will be impressed either way :-) Andy Sennitt. ---[Start Commercial]--------------------- World Radio TV Handbook 2003 is out! Order it now! http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0823059677/hardcoredxcom ---[End Commercial]----------------------- ________________________________________ Hard-Core-DX mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://dallas.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx http://www.hard-core-dx.com/ _______________________________________________ THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt
