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Has morse code saved any lives recently?
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October 22nd 06, 01:48 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.swap
Dee Flint
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 618
Has morse code saved any lives recently?
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message
...
In message .com,
writes
wrote:
wrote:
Slow Code wrote:
Ian Jackson wrote in
:
There was recently a thread here on the subject of whether morse
had
saved any lives recently. Well it has in the UK!
Have a look at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/h...re/6070444.stm
"Torch used in Morse code rescue.
Coastguards in Hampshire have rescued a sailor who used his torch
to
flash an SOS message in Morse code."
Ian.
Boy, Lenny Anderson is going to be ****ed. That's not the sort
of CW news he likes to hear. Lucky for the sailor there was
still someone out there that knew code.
SC
Is it still Morse Code if the speed is measured in words per hour?
Imagine lighting and extinguishing a torch to send SOS.
In the UK, one of the common meanings of "torch" is what Americans call
a "flashlight".
I guess that's the difference between Homo Sapiens and Neanderthals.
Bring your
lunch and fire extinguisher.
This may explain your confusion:
I happen to know the difference between flashlights and torches.
Cavemen carry torches.
Oops! I didn't spot that problem. I should realised that 'torch' would
cause confusion among you benighted Merkins. Being British, but having a
Merkin daughter-in-law, I am reasonably bilingual these days. It's very
interesting how the English language has diverged. However, be assured
that, in the UK, we have progressed to using flashlights and torches
interchangeably these days.
Ian.
--
One place I worked where we sometimes bid on jobs from the UK kept a list of
terms with the UK versus US definitions because of the differences in
terminology.
Dee, N8UZE
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