[videoblogging] Re: blogging != CB radio the end times

2005-11-21 Thread Eric Rice
I love how ham radio gets brought into the mix. Two of us on our show are 
amateur radio 
operators, licensed and the whole nine, as are most of my friends. It's the 
most bizarre 
analogy I've ever seen yet.

Unless we need licenses to blog? ;-)

ER


--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Meade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 well I'm not sure how Ham Radio got into the mix (its different than CB) ...
 but as a Federally Licensed Short Wave Radio Operator (HAM Radio) I'll chime
 in ... :-)
 
 Let me first speak to the slightly OT part: Yeah HAM operators have been
 operating a network of computers over short wave for ... well a long long
 long long long time. Ham Radio has always been an interesting (and at times
 vital) component in emergency/disaster communications.
 
 ok .. now back to the topic (I think).
 
 I've kinda thought of it this way in my head: VoIP is to Ham Radio as
 Vlogging is to TV.
 
 VoIP let people freely find/communicate with people all over the world
 without the entry barrier (license) or technical knowledge (Radio
 operation/code/etc) that things like Ham Radio have.
 
 One of the coolest things that brought young people into the hobby of Ham
 Radio was the wonder of sitting town and being able to have a random
 conversation and share ideas with people all over the world. It was great.
 It required a license and to learn Morse code, and to know how radio signals
 worked, and how to tune an antenna for the right band, and all sorts of
 things ... but it was great.
 
 Today ... you can do that with Yahoo Messenger. :-P
 
 The other amazing thing you could do with HAM Radio was stay in contact
 anywhere ... even in your car. HAMs would set up auto-patches to route
 Shortwave to/from land line telephones ... WHOA!
 
 Today ... we all have cell phones. :-P
 
 Understandably HAMs were somewhat concerned that their already dwindling
 numbers might drop off all together as this new distributed and unregulated
 communication medium found its place in homes all over the world. Sure there
 was alot of noise on this 'Internet' but the shear ease of use (comparably)
 was hard to ignore.
 
 Mainstream media is no doubt similarly concerned that their revenue models
 and programming formats are going to be serious problems as a new and
 engaging form of on-demand entertainment is insisted upon by more and more
 of the world.
 
 Ham Radio Operators eventually learned that things were going to change, but
 nobody was likely to go extinct. Ham Radio license requirements have
 changes, preferred operating methods, bandwidth has been reallocated - but
 HAMs are still around. Hams still use auto-patch at times (even though they
 have a cell phone). Hams still spend hours hunting for the perfect
 long-range signal (even though they could just open up an international VoIP
 chat room).
 
 The same will happen with media I think.
 
 Some vloggers will move more mainstream. Some mainstream will move to be
 more vloggish. Vloggers will have to deal with more and more show-like vlogs
 (and the expectation that will set in new potential viewers). Mainstream
 media will have to deal with the fact that people can get unfiltered news
 and entertainment on demand (and the expectation that will set in their
 viewers).
 
 People willing to look through a bit of noise will use VoIP/Vlogging
 scenario... the rest will find comfort in the more controlled
 HAM/Mainstream-Media scenario :-)
 
 Sure there's noise in our channel ... but it wont prevent the change that is
 bound to come.
 
 ... I think I found the point there?? ...
 
 - Dave
 
 --
 http://www.DavidMeade.com







 Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ~-- 
1.2 million kids a year are victims of human trafficking. Stop slavery.
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Re: [videoblogging] Re: blogging != CB radio the end times

2005-11-21 Thread David Meade
Hehe yeah.  I still really like Shortwave, but rarely find time for it
now. If I had to fit Ham Radio into the analogy I'd liken them to
mainstream media.  It's licensed, controlled, and regulated ... where
as things like VoIP (largely) isn't.

73s de N9LTQ

:-P

On 11/21/05, Eric Rice [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I love how ham radio gets brought into the mix. Two of us on our show are 
 amateur radio
 operators, licensed and the whole nine, as are most of my friends. It's the 
 most bizarre
 analogy I've ever seen yet.

 Unless we need licenses to blog? ;-)

 ER


 --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Meade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  well I'm not sure how Ham Radio got into the mix (its different than CB) ...
  but as a Federally Licensed Short Wave Radio Operator (HAM Radio) I'll chime
  in ... :-)
 
  Let me first speak to the slightly OT part: Yeah HAM operators have been
  operating a network of computers over short wave for ... well a long long
  long long long time. Ham Radio has always been an interesting (and at times
  vital) component in emergency/disaster communications.
 
  ok .. now back to the topic (I think).
 
  I've kinda thought of it this way in my head: VoIP is to Ham Radio as
  Vlogging is to TV.
 
  VoIP let people freely find/communicate with people all over the world
  without the entry barrier (license) or technical knowledge (Radio
  operation/code/etc) that things like Ham Radio have.
 
  One of the coolest things that brought young people into the hobby of Ham
  Radio was the wonder of sitting town and being able to have a random
  conversation and share ideas with people all over the world. It was great.
  It required a license and to learn Morse code, and to know how radio signals
  worked, and how to tune an antenna for the right band, and all sorts of
  things ... but it was great.
 
  Today ... you can do that with Yahoo Messenger. :-P
 
  The other amazing thing you could do with HAM Radio was stay in contact
  anywhere ... even in your car. HAMs would set up auto-patches to route
  Shortwave to/from land line telephones ... WHOA!
 
  Today ... we all have cell phones. :-P
 
  Understandably HAMs were somewhat concerned that their already dwindling
  numbers might drop off all together as this new distributed and unregulated
  communication medium found its place in homes all over the world. Sure there
  was alot of noise on this 'Internet' but the shear ease of use (comparably)
  was hard to ignore.
 
  Mainstream media is no doubt similarly concerned that their revenue models
  and programming formats are going to be serious problems as a new and
  engaging form of on-demand entertainment is insisted upon by more and more
  of the world.
 
  Ham Radio Operators eventually learned that things were going to change, but
  nobody was likely to go extinct. Ham Radio license requirements have
  changes, preferred operating methods, bandwidth has been reallocated - but
  HAMs are still around. Hams still use auto-patch at times (even though they
  have a cell phone). Hams still spend hours hunting for the perfect
  long-range signal (even though they could just open up an international VoIP
  chat room).
 
  The same will happen with media I think.
 
  Some vloggers will move more mainstream. Some mainstream will move to be
  more vloggish. Vloggers will have to deal with more and more show-like vlogs
  (and the expectation that will set in new potential viewers). Mainstream
  media will have to deal with the fact that people can get unfiltered news
  and entertainment on demand (and the expectation that will set in their
  viewers).
 
  People willing to look through a bit of noise will use VoIP/Vlogging
  scenario... the rest will find comfort in the more controlled
  HAM/Mainstream-Media scenario :-)
 
  Sure there's noise in our channel ... but it wont prevent the change that is
  bound to come.
 
  ... I think I found the point there?? ...
 
  - Dave
 
  --
  http://www.DavidMeade.com
 








 Yahoo! Groups Links









--
http://www.DavidMeade.com


 Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ~-- 
1.2 million kids a year are victims of human trafficking. Stop slavery.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/WpTY2A/izNLAA/yQLSAA/lBLqlB/TM
~- 

 
Yahoo! Groups Links

* To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/videoblogging/

* To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

* Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
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[videoblogging] Re: blogging != CB radio the end times

2005-11-21 Thread Kevin
I never thought that amateur radio would be discussed in a video blogger group, 
but it's 
great to hear how it all goes hand in hand. I know any ham radio operator would 
freak out 
if they are ever compared to cb radio operators, so I have to laugh at that. 
I've been a ham 
(radio operator) for a couple years now because it runs in the family, but I 
always fear that 
it's a dying bread, so it's nice to hear younger, digital orientated, people 
still interested in 
it too!

73s KC9FNR

Kev!




 Hehe yeah.  I still really like Shortwave, but rarely find time for it
 now. If I had to fit Ham Radio into the analogy I'd liken them to
 mainstream media.  It's licensed, controlled, and regulated ... where
 as things like VoIP (largely) isn't.
 
 73s de N9LTQ
 
 :-P
 
 On 11/21/05, Eric Rice [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I love how ham radio gets brought into the mix. Two of us on our show are 
  amateur 
radio
  operators, licensed and the whole nine, as are most of my friends. It's the 
  most 
bizarre
  analogy I've ever seen yet.
 
  Unless we need licenses to blog? ;-)
 
  ER
 
 
  --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Meade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
   well I'm not sure how Ham Radio got into the mix (its different than CB) 
   ...
   but as a Federally Licensed Short Wave Radio Operator (HAM Radio) I'll 
   chime
   in ... :-)
  
   Let me first speak to the slightly OT part: Yeah HAM operators have been
   operating a network of computers over short wave for ... well a long long
   long long long time. Ham Radio has always been an interesting (and at 
   times
   vital) component in emergency/disaster communications.
  
   ok .. now back to the topic (I think).
  
   I've kinda thought of it this way in my head: VoIP is to Ham Radio as
   Vlogging is to TV.
  
   VoIP let people freely find/communicate with people all over the world
   without the entry barrier (license) or technical knowledge (Radio
   operation/code/etc) that things like Ham Radio have.
  
   One of the coolest things that brought young people into the hobby of Ham
   Radio was the wonder of sitting town and being able to have a random
   conversation and share ideas with people all over the world. It was great.
   It required a license and to learn Morse code, and to know how radio 
   signals
   worked, and how to tune an antenna for the right band, and all sorts of
   things ... but it was great.
  
   Today ... you can do that with Yahoo Messenger. :-P
  
   The other amazing thing you could do with HAM Radio was stay in contact
   anywhere ... even in your car. HAMs would set up auto-patches to route
   Shortwave to/from land line telephones ... WHOA!
  
   Today ... we all have cell phones. :-P
  
   Understandably HAMs were somewhat concerned that their already dwindling
   numbers might drop off all together as this new distributed and 
   unregulated
   communication medium found its place in homes all over the world. Sure 
   there
   was alot of noise on this 'Internet' but the shear ease of use 
   (comparably)
   was hard to ignore.
  
   Mainstream media is no doubt similarly concerned that their revenue models
   and programming formats are going to be serious problems as a new and
   engaging form of on-demand entertainment is insisted upon by more and more
   of the world.
  
   Ham Radio Operators eventually learned that things were going to change, 
   but
   nobody was likely to go extinct. Ham Radio license requirements have
   changes, preferred operating methods, bandwidth has been reallocated - but
   HAMs are still around. Hams still use auto-patch at times (even though 
   they
   have a cell phone). Hams still spend hours hunting for the perfect
   long-range signal (even though they could just open up an international 
   VoIP
   chat room).
  
   The same will happen with media I think.
  
   Some vloggers will move more mainstream. Some mainstream will move to be
   more vloggish. Vloggers will have to deal with more and more show-like 
   vlogs
   (and the expectation that will set in new potential viewers). Mainstream
   media will have to deal with the fact that people can get unfiltered news
   and entertainment on demand (and the expectation that will set in their
   viewers).
  
   People willing to look through a bit of noise will use VoIP/Vlogging
   scenario... the rest will find comfort in the more controlled
   HAM/Mainstream-Media scenario :-)
  
   Sure there's noise in our channel ... but it wont prevent the change that 
   is
   bound to come.
  
   ... I think I found the point there?? ...
  
   - Dave
  
   --
   http://www.DavidMeade.com
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Yahoo! Groups Links
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 --
 http://www.DavidMeade.com








 Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ~-- 
1.2 million kids a year are victims of human trafficking. Stop slavery.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/WpTY2A/izNLAA/yQLSAA/lBLqlB/TM

Re: [videoblogging] Re: blogging != CB radio the end times

2005-11-21 Thread Thomas G Henry



hey folks... didnt mean to compare two totally different things there just ignorant... cb is not ham... gotcha... 


pulling things dreadfully off topic again

i guess im just curious what of the internet in a post apocalyptic scenario?

although i guess if ur rockin ham... u dont really need to run the
computer into it... u can just re-organize society by speaking... no
email needed... 


thoughts on the network infrastructure that will reorganize society anyone?

On 11/21/05, Kevin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:




I never thought that amateur radio would be discussed in a video blogger group, but it's 
great to hear how it all goes hand in hand. I know any ham radio operator would freak out 
if they are ever compared to cb radio operators, so I have to laugh at that. I've been a ham 
(radio operator) for a couple years now because it runs in the family, but I always fear that 
it's a dying bread, so it's nice to hear younger, digital orientated, people still interested in 
it too!

73s KC9FNR

Kev!




 Hehe yeah. I still really like Shortwave, but rarely find time for it
 now. If I had to fit Ham Radio into the analogy I'd liken them to
 mainstream media. It's licensed, controlled, and regulated ... where
 as things like VoIP (largely) isn't.
 
 73s de N9LTQ
 
 :-P
 
 On 11/21/05, Eric Rice [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I love how ham radio gets brought into the mix. Two of us on our show are amateur 
radio
  operators, licensed and the whole nine, as are most of my friends. It's the most 
bizarre
  analogy I've ever seen yet.
 
  Unless we need licenses to blog? ;-)
 
  ER
 
 
  --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Meade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
   well I'm not sure how Ham Radio got into the mix (its different than CB) ...
   but as a Federally Licensed Short Wave Radio Operator (HAM Radio) I'll chime
   in ... :-)
  
   Let me first speak to the slightly OT part: Yeah HAM operators have been
   operating a network of computers over short wave for ... well a long long
   long long long time. Ham Radio has always been an interesting (and at times
   vital) component in emergency/disaster communications.
  
   ok .. now back to the topic (I think).
  
   I've kinda thought of it this way in my head: VoIP is to Ham Radio as
   Vlogging is to TV.
  
   VoIP let people freely find/communicate with people all over the world
   without the entry barrier (license) or technical knowledge (Radio
   operation/code/etc) that things like Ham Radio have.
  
   One of the coolest things that brought young people into the hobby of Ham
   Radio was the wonder of sitting town and being able to have a random
   conversation and share ideas with people all over the world. It was great.
   It required a license and to learn Morse code, and to know how radio signals
   worked, and how to tune an antenna for the right band, and all sorts of
   things ... but it was great.
  
   Today ... you can do that with Yahoo Messenger. :-P
  
   The other amazing thing you could do with HAM Radio was stay in contact
   anywhere ... even in your car. HAMs would set up auto-patches to route
   Shortwave to/from land line telephones ... WHOA!
  
   Today ... we all have cell phones. :-P
  
   Understandably HAMs were somewhat concerned that their already dwindling
   numbers might drop off all together as this new distributed and unregulated
   communication medium found its place in homes all over the world. Sure there
   was alot of noise on this 'Internet' but the shear ease of use (comparably)
   was hard to ignore.
  
   Mainstream media is no doubt similarly concerned that their revenue models
   and programming formats are going to be serious problems as a new and
   engaging form of on-demand entertainment is insisted upon by more and more
   of the world.
  
   Ham Radio Operators eventually learned that things were going to change, but
   nobody was likely to go extinct. Ham Radio license requirements have
   changes, preferred operating methods, bandwidth has been reallocated - but
   HAMs are still around. Hams still use auto-patch at times (even though they
   have a cell phone). Hams still spend hours hunting for the perfect
   long-range signal (even though they could just open up an international VoIP
   chat room).
  
   The same will happen with media I think.
  
   Some vloggers will move more mainstream. Some mainstream will move to be
   more vloggish. Vloggers will have to deal with more and more show-like vlogs
   (and the expectation that will set in new potential viewers). Mainstream
   media will have to deal with the fact that people can get unfiltered news
   and entertainment on demand (and the expectation that will set in their
   viewers).
  
   People willing to look through a bit of noise will use VoIP/Vlogging
   scenario... the rest will find comfort in the more controlled
   HAM/Mainstream-Media scenario :-)
  
   Sure there's noise in our channel ... but it wont prevent the 

Re: [videoblogging] Re: blogging != CB radio the end times

2005-11-21 Thread David Meade



Hmmm ... for some reason I cant resist the chance to imagine how the post apocalyptic Internet would be ... :-P

Well Ham radio operators have been networking computers over radio
waves for a long time. I actually saw this done before I ever saw
the Internet. Post apocalyptic scenario ... I'd imagine you'd
see Ham Radios spring up quite quickly (actually they're already there
... but you'd see them become hubs of communication quite
quickly). There is a well documented and pretty robust emergency
message relay system on short wave. Stations would operate in
all sorts of modes, including computers.

(random crazy thoughts follow...)

With the given that we'd have electricity somehow (some sort of
generator would have to work)... regular wired Local Area Networks
would pop up easily enough, I suppose. They'd probably use
regular Wireless Access Points to inter-network with other small LANs
in the immediate area as needed. Each of these smaller LAN would
probably schedule their availability ... a few hours at a time so as to
reserve power and bandwidth. They'd probably use mostly text
(email/usenet style systems) to pass along vital information from one
pocket of survivors to the next ... why waste valuable time/fuel for
the network up-time needed to send a video message when text would take
only a fraction of the time (not to mention the bandwidth that other
networks might be waiting on in order to pass a message).

One of these LANs would ideally have a Ham Radio Relay Station and it
could act as a gateway to other HAM stations in distant metropolitan
areas. Messages from one small network to another could be routed
via short wave radio (which has extremely large range) to the nearest
Ham Radio Relay station.

Small LANs in wireless range of their local Ham Radio Relay station,
could snyc up with the gateway during their scheduled up-time ...
stations further out would have to have their messages trickle down to
them over a period of time.

The number of HAM relay stations I imagine would grow quite quickly
such that each major area of population would have many gateways soon.

Eventually someone would figure out how to get the satellite Internet
services to work again (I imagine there would be some initial outage as
their ground based ISP goes dark?) and then there'd be even more global
gateways than just the HAM nets.

All of this would, I expect, be used mostly to marshal resources between survivor groups. 

Things would get ever more reliable and real-time as the infrastructure
is rebuilt ... assuming there is enough food/water for that to
matter. 

As long as the air wasnt toxic, the climate tolerable, we could find
food and water, and generate electricity for at least short periods of
time ...
 ... we'd be vlogging again in no time. :-P

- Dave

-- 
http://www.DavidMeade.com
On 11/21/05, Thomas G Henry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



hey folks... didnt mean to compare two totally different things there just ignorant... cb is not ham... gotcha... 


pulling things dreadfully off topic again

i guess im just curious what of the internet in a post apocalyptic scenario?

although i guess if ur rockin ham... u dont really need to run the
computer into it... u can just re-organize society by speaking... no
email needed... 


thoughts on the network infrastructure that will reorganize society anyone?

On 11/21/05, Kevin 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:





I never thought that amateur radio would be discussed in a video blogger group, but it's 
great to hear how it all goes hand in hand. I know any ham radio operator would freak out 
if they are ever compared to cb radio operators, so I have to laugh at that. I've been a ham 
(radio operator) for a couple years now because it runs in the family, but I always fear that 
it's a dying bread, so it's nice to hear younger, digital orientated, people still interested in 
it too!

73s KC9FNR

Kev!




 Hehe yeah. I still really like Shortwave, but rarely find time for it
 now. If I had to fit Ham Radio into the analogy I'd liken them to
 mainstream media. It's licensed, controlled, and regulated ... where
 as things like VoIP (largely) isn't.
 
 73s de N9LTQ
 
 :-P
 
 On 11/21/05, Eric Rice [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I love how ham radio gets brought into the mix. Two of us on our show are amateur 
radio
  operators, licensed and the whole nine, as are most of my friends. It's the most 
bizarre
  analogy I've ever seen yet.
 
  Unless we need licenses to blog? ;-)
 
  ER
 
 
  --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, David Meade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
   well I'm not sure how Ham Radio got into the mix (its different than CB) ...
   but as a Federally Licensed Short Wave Radio Operator (HAM Radio) I'll chime
   in ... :-)
  
   Let me first speak to the slightly OT part: Yeah HAM operators have been
   operating a network of computers over short wave for ... well a long long
   long long long time. Ham Radio has always been an interesting (and at times