That geomagnetic upset definitely cleared the decks, though a few Japanese made it through just the same as local sunrise approached, when everything died quickly. Not that many DUs replaced the lack of Asians.
pretty darn good audio (all of it understandable by a native speaker, at least briefly): 612 4QR man talking about a group of islands, //702 earlier 1444UT Reasonable audio at times during the period (much of it understandable by a native speaker, though often battling w/splash or noise): 594 JOAK man and woman in Japanese 1453UT 774 JOUB Chinese lessons 1341UT, not much of an appearance later not so reasonable audio, occasional words or phrases in splash or noise could be understood by a native speaker: 594 3WV man talking //612 1447UT, soon replaced by JOAK 702 2BL teletalk //612 1438UT 747 JOIB woman talking //774 1455UT 756 jazzy pop vocals 1428UT, assumed New Zealand Burbles in the splatter and noise (if lucky, language might be guessed at by cadence of talk, or parallel established by changes in talk or music) 576 woman talking, DU English intonation 1420UT 828 sounded like NHK2 English lessons 1434UT Strongish het, no or "near imaginary" audio (either undermodulated or ravaged by splatter) 1242 1566 seemed to be Asian; 567 585 675 792 891 1017 1494 seemed to be DU best wishes, Nick Nick Hall-Patch Victoria, BC Canada _______________________________________________ IRCA mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/irca Opinions expressed in messages on this mailing list are those of the original contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, its editors, publishing staff, or officers For more information: http://www.ircaonline.org To Post a message: [email protected]
