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#231
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On 16 Jul 2003 05:23:30 -0700, Brian wrote:
Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it, but it does give us a certain common heritage. Who do you think may have rules America prior to our independance? According to a colleague of mine, the Cherokees. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#232
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On 16 Jul 2003 03:06:13 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:
Well, here's an idea. Should you find later that you need to learn about something, have you ever heard of books? I find them very useful. How long does one have to read the book to learn how to play the piano? -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#233
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On 16 Jul 2003 14:28:18 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:
I had to read it a few times. I think the reason for poor performance in UK engineering has nothing to do with the quality of UK engineers and everything to do with the culture of UK companies, in which the engineers are not in charge, but instead the accountants are. If you don't think that that is the case "over here" too, you have not been paying attention to how Corporate America is being run. And this is not because we don't study business subjects (we do), or because we don't do English or History or 'Western Civilisation' in college (the accountants don't either). In other words, your "professional education" is basically trade school programs. What a waste. As I understand it (and I freely admit there are gaps in my knowledge of your system), you can get a 4-year degree over here with 120 (?) semester- hours of credit, and maybe only half of it has to be in your major (?). When I sat down and tried to calculate it (from old timetables, since there are no hours on my transcript, only grades) my 3-year UK degree included about 150 semester-hours of classroom time, of which about 120 semester hours was in engineering subjects, the rest being things like economics, finance, mathematics, etc. IIRC my BEE degree was more like 180 hours (4 years of 20-credit semesters plus one summer of Surveying -- did you take that by any chance? It came in real handy when I built my first house and when I studied Real Estate Law in law school and when I discuss or plot radio path and contour calculations or directional antenna patterns with clients or even map-reading and "orienteering" with non-technical hiking friends and relatives. No chemistry in an engineering program? This is not the same as a Literature or Cultural Humasnitiers course. This is basic science. In an EE program we took a year of chemistry (class and lab), two years of physics, one year of advanced math, and assorted courses in non-EE engineering subjects such as thermodynamics, mechanics of materials, atomic physics, and surveying, plus our rigorous EE power and electronics courses. That was 50 years ago. Now they require a lot more of "non-EE" stuff such as environmental engineering and medical engineering The school has acquired a reputation for application research in those fields. Otherwise one is not a rell-educated engineer - one is a geek with a degree. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#234
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#235
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Dick Carroll wrote in message ...
Brian wrote: (like ol' CW loving me) have been doing WEFAX for a couple decades, at least. Or were, until the HF stations went off the air. Now I just go to a website and bring it up on the screen. Pfft. ur still a dud. Eminently ignorable man child. They happen. |
#236
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Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
Dave Heil wrote in : Alun Palmer wrote: Mike Coslo wrote in : You must be related to our friend Vipul! At least you think alike. - Mike KB3EIA - Well, he's clearly Indian, That isn't clear at all. and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me if we share some views in common and don't buy into the received wisdom of the US of A. That wouldn't surprise me either but both of you seem to prefer feeding at the American trough. Dave K8MN In this economy it's less of a trough and more of a small dish There are alternatives. Just the other day my neighbor commented that he was considering a move to Pakistan or India for the opportunity to build a better life for himself and his family. ;^) |
#237
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Larry Roll K3LT wrote:
And unlike yours, most of those opinions are being made by people with genuine operating experience. Sorry about the truth, Kim -- I know it hurts you, but I'm not going to look at a pile of crap on the floor and call it a bowl of cherries. I'm almost afraid to ask what your last meal was before your procedure, Larry!! 8^) Glad it went well, tho'. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#238
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![]() "Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message ... "Dee D. Flint" wrote in message y.com... "Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message ... How about a different parallel?? Drivers licenses! How many here have earned ALL endorsements/license classes for their drivers license? i.e. motorcycle operators permit etc. Those that haven't must just be lazy too eh? Not a valid comparison the way you put it. If the person isn't interested in the privileges, it doesn't mean he is lazy for not getting the endorsement. It's the person who wants the privileges and isn't willing to get the endorsement that would be considered lazy. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE I disagree based on statements made by others here before. Having both HF and VHF+ access to all of the amateur radio spectrum (i.e. upgrading all the way to extra) is so important to some, then the parallel is there. Not exercising the full advantages of the license. Somehow I think you are misunderstanding my point of view. If they do not wish to exercise the privileges that come with an upgrade, then there is no need to upgrade and that's fine with me. It's those who want the privileges and whine about having to do the work to get them that bother me. I have had 2 CSCE's now for the morse code test, and let both of them slip as I see no need exercise the use of those privileges, nor can I at this point due to operational limitations. But apparently upgrades are even more important to some here more than god. Again, no one has a problem with a person who prefers not to upgrade and explores those areas for which he/she is licensed. The problem arises when someone wants the upgrade privileges without the upgrade work. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#239
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"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...
Hey Carl, refresh me, how many "channels" to we have on 20M? Once a Tech always Tech huh? {Decorum off} Bite me. {Decorum back on} I love it when you talk dirty Carl. "Channel impariments" refer to the "propagation channel" and if you had an idea of where to beg, borrow, rent, or steal a clue you'd know that ... but then again, it's a technical term ... I guess I shouldn't expect that you would be familiar with it ... I know exactly what a channel is. Lotta people have made the mistake of underestimating what I actually know Carl. I'll tellya what the average contester's response to your basic concept would be: "Why would I go thru all these computer pushups when all I have to do is fire up my radios and get on the air and have the real thing?" Is loading a program onto your PC such a difficult thing for you? Poor fellow. No Carl, I'm actually quite adept at loading software. I'm also quite adept at getting on the air without needing a computer which I much prefer unless I want to run RTTY or PSK/MSK. The idea is to provide the same user experience in terms of noise, fading, static, QRM, etc. WITHOUT actually trashing the band in a way that precludes other uses at the same time. Yeah, uh-huh. Everybody give up real-time on-the-air interaction with the natural vagaries of propagation, interferences and "unprocessed" direct contact with other humans and climb into their Winboxes and play computer games while Stevenson & Coffman Inc. trash the bands their way. No even after pigs learn to fly Carl. Don't take my word for any of it Carl. Request the NPRM and see what happens. Oughta be a piece of cake for you since you know all them guys. As far as "reliable and robust" is concerned if I need both or either all I have to do is dial into Ma Bell's system or log in via my ISP. Who needs your "help" if that's all I want? And when you need that reliability and robustness for emergency comms and conditions are poor? Oh, yea, you rely on Morse ... despite the fact that there are alternatives that are "better" (as defined in my reply to Jim) ... how quaint. Bull****. When were the last three times any hams handled or tried to handle any serious emergency over a difficult HF path with any mode? "Reliability and robustness for emergency comms" is about the weakest justification for your "system" I can imagine. I suspect that I could shred your system reliability claims with a few keystrokes in Mathcad by simply running a system parts count vs. reliability analysis. How many parts are there in a laptop anyway? I'm not into RACES and never stated that I was. But I have passed more third party long-haul H&W traffic than you'll ever manage to do and every bit of it was via SSB. Plus I've passed a bit of minor emergency traffic via vhf FM. I have two charged & ready to roll 2M 5w HTs with gain antennas right here Carl and a couple 50w 2M mobile rigs. I can toss either in the car and have it on the air in a minute or two. If things get really nasty I also have an HF mobile rig I can also "deploy" in the car. And I don't need a computer to do any of it. Everybody knows that only place in the ham bands you'll likely run into a real emergency is on 2M and I'm good to go right now while you're still "planning" some grandiose homebrewed Lehigh County EOC. Not that I expect that to actually happen of course. Carl - wk3c w3rv |
#240
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Phil Kane wrote:
On 16 Jul 2003 03:06:13 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote: Well, here's an idea. Should you find later that you need to learn about something, have you ever heard of books? I find them very useful. How long does one have to read the book to learn how to play the piano? Game, set, match, Phil...... - Mike KB3EIA - |
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