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#1
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In article , "Bill Sohl"
writes: For all the complaining of lower standards...yada, yada, yada, I find it amazing we have the incredible technology advances, capabilities, etc which far exceed anything we had 30 years ago. Just where and who do you attribute those advances to...if not the new generation of students graduating from our schools? Bill: Don't look now, but all of this incredible technology comes to us hams in the form of off-the-shelf appliances, largely designed and manufacturered in Japan. 73 de Larry, K3LT |
#2
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![]() "Larry Roll K3LT" wrote in message ... In article , "Bill Sohl" writes: For all the complaining of lower standards...yada, yada, yada, I find it amazing we have the incredible technology advances, capabilities, etc which far exceed anything we had 30 years ago. Just where and who do you attribute those advances to...if not the new generation of students graduating from our schools? Bill: Don't look now, but all of this incredible technology comes to us hams in the form of off-the-shelf appliances, largely designed and manufacturered in Japan. New inventions are not limited to Japan. US companies still produce an incredible amount of new techology and applications. Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
#3
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"Bill Sohl" wrote in message ...
"Larry Roll K3LT" wrote in message ... Bill: Don't look now, but all of this incredible technology comes to us hams in the form of off-the-shelf appliances, largely designed and manufacturered in Japan. New inventions are not limited to Japan. US companies still produce an incredible amount of new techology and applications. Cheers, Bill K2UNK Close the patent office. Everything that could be invented has been. |
#4
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In article , "Bill Sohl"
writes: Dee D. Flint, N8uZE For all the complaining of lower standards...yada, yada, yada, I find it amazing we have the incredible technology advances, capabilities, etc which far exceed anything we had 30 years ago. Just where and who do you attribute those advances to...if not the new generation of students graduating from our schools? Invention of the transistor - 1947 by Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley. Invention of the integrated circuit - by Jack Kilby during a Texas Instruments plant-wide vacation period when he was a new hire and hadn't earned any vacation leave. The cellular telephone was a US invention, a marriage of a handheld radio (first by Motorola) and the US telephone system (a host of new inventions all by itself). The invention of the first microprocessor (Intel, up in Silicon Gulch) opened the way for the modern PC...and all sorts of things from a $40 lawn-sprinkler controller to a fully-automated cashier-receipt maker-stock totalizer computer system in supermarkets. The LED and LCD and TFT flat-screen display are all US inventions. Both the space shuttle and the bikini swimsuit are inventions from Southern California. :-) "Lower standards?" Hmmm...in 2003 there is still a requirement for demonstrated morse code skill to obtain two of the three US radio amateur licenses. Morse code was first used commercially in 1844...in the USA. Seems like that "standard" has been inflexibly kept for about 91 years in amateur radio! LHA |
#5
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In article , "Phil Kane"
writes: Izzat so? Where's all the high-speed digital communications infrastructure that was promised to ham radio when the 5 WPM code test was dropped for the Technician-class license? It's working - quite well, than kew - in the San Francisco Bay Area on the 2.4 GHz band. Sorry, there's no access point in Pennsylvania. Phil: I wouldn't know about Pennsylvania, but down here in a place that prides itself in the name "Lower, Slower Delaware," I'm sure that a high-speed digital infrastructure will be the last thing to come to the local amateur radio scene. 73 de Larry, K3LT |
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