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#31
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In article , Mike Coslo
writes: Len Over 21 wrote: In article , "Jim Hampton" writes: It would seem prudent to have the ARRL petition the FCC to raise amateur power limits to partially recover that lost 10 dB. I think perhaps a 10 kw limit would be close enough. It might also make BPL communications a bit dicey too ![]() Har! :-) :-) :-) I was totally flabbergasted at reading the Phase 2 report. They boldly went where no technical person dared to go in saying "BPL will 'improve' the electric power line noise problems!" Ideology trumps science! Yes, that was a shocking thing to read. As of the end of the business day on Friday, 18 June 2004, the Comment numbers in the FCC ECFS were - docket 04-37 (NPRM) 1,399 docket 03-104 (NOI) 6,076 There's lots of more-than-one-page real technical problem presentations there showing that Access BPL is full of snit than there are for the BPL proponents. I don't think that will matter much. The writing seemed clear on the wall last year. BPL *will* be started. The business folks are geared up for profits. The President has made both BPL and Broadband a goal. The good little Republican syncophants are synchronized to The Word from on high. BPL = Ban Pretentious Liberals? Heh. No. It doesn't matter which political power is "in power" in DC on Access BPL. It evolved from the initial trial in Norway a decade ago and presents a "business ideology" (of making money) and all that capitalism stuff. Somehow, through whatever means, the BPL advocates in the USA convinced the FCC that it was the greatest thing since sliced bread to fit the "broadband super highway." It just happened that the FCC has Republican-oriented commissioners and the Acting Chief of the NTIA is sucking up to Bush's speech statement in rather blatant politicalization. Hoo, we are getting close to that strange discussion we had last year with the fellow saying that if we know that it interferes, and we transmit, we are purposely interfereing. That's enough to give a person a headache! Not quite. Amateurs have to understand that they are small-time players in this particular game. All the rah-rah and we-are-the- greatest internal pep-talking doesn't help the image presented to the lawmakers. It boils down to a very few individuals trying to "get even" for incidental interference by deliberate interference with a communications service. That service is much bigger, in both employees and affected customers than a few hams in any particular locality. It would be a lopsided legal fight, despite all the whoopdedo of "helping" by the League. If Access BPL spreads to many more communities, the League would run out of legal and moral resources to help. Deliberate interference isn't necessary. Ordinary operating should be sufficient to disrupt Access BPL in any one location. Hams would just need to transmit more and on different HF bands...not spending more of their free time on the Internet and then writing that "they are very active on the bands" when they were not. But if a person is in a neighborhood with Access BPL, they won't need to use that linear. Seems 100 watts will do just fine. I don't know the frequency context of BPL/Amateur transmitter interference, but my guess is that if you hear it on the band you are transmitting on, you'll do it interference harm if you fire up. Perhaps. Technical details of Access BPL systems have yet to be released to the electronics industry. While that may be logical to assume, it isn't proof positive. All in all, though, the FCC has NO POWER to proactively stop Access BPL now. At best all it can do is set the incidental RF radiation levels and then enforce those. Or, wait about 30 years or so until BPL is truly legacy service and then, like land telephony, start drafting more stringent regulations. In 30 years from now, few of us will be in a position to do much. I left that in on purpose. Just to emphasize that the FCC CANNOT stop Access BPL right now. But, what can be done, is to demand TESTING of any installed systems. LOTS of it to correspond with a wide-area installation (a logical demand). The FCC has NO power to stop BPL directly. It's not in the rules. [that's why docket 04-37 is concerned with an NPRM] But, by demanding appropriate TESTING with emphasis on PASSING all tests, THAT can make it economically infeasible. Testing takes valuable manhours. BPL systems will be at many, many places in one community, therefore MUCH testing is needed for compliance. Not only does that affect the installation budget, but it takes TIME to complete. Businesses offering broadband services want to start making money as soon as possible (also logical) but lots of testing and test time would delay that. That's a realistic way of looking at the problem and a possible way to make BPL economically difficult to sustain. However, remember that once BPL is in-place, it will quickly become a legacy service and damn difficult to remove. |
#32
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In article , Mike Coslo
writes: Dee D. Flint wrote: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , (Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes: Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth From: "John Anderson" Date: 6/19/2004 7:52 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: qd5Bc.119983$3x.87399@attbi_s54 "N2EY" wrote in message ... I think/hope what will really kill BPL is economics. It simply won't be able to compete with DSL, cable and other technologies. 73 de Jim, N2EY Bush appointed Powell, lets boot Bush, replace him with anyone who will work for the people, not the rich corporations! And replace him with who? John Kerry? Why not? Very simple reason why not. According to liberals, cheap internet access (remember it was Gore who "invented the internet" according to his own statements) Produce those statements Dee. Show me that quote! Or do you just repeat what you are told? In case you want something other than NeoCon Propaganda What he said was that: "during my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet". Gore was instrumental along with other Congressmen and perhaps women in paving the way for the internet as we know it today. Within the context of the interview, the message was clear enough. Unfortunately, *some* members of the (liberal?) press chose to not only take it out of context, but deliberately misquoted him. Suggesting Gore saying that he "invented the internet" is very, very inaccurate. The Internet went PUBLIC in 1991...under the Clinton-Gore administration. The Internet ALREADY EXISTED and was running. Some may have been, as I was, already on USENET...which grew out of ARPANET that existed in the 1970s. Gore was instrumental in getting GOVERNMENT involved in the Internet, starting the ball rolling so to speak. Every U.S. government agency, nearly every U.S. community government now has a website. The military picked up on that and most large units have websites and promotes both training and information exchanges through the web. The electronics industry and academia as well as the U.S. government were the creators of ARPANET through the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). With more and more use, plus evolved increases in rate of information exchange, that net split with USENET linking industry and universities. Communications technologies kept improving, advancing and by late 1990 there were many who felt that this "new" Internet should be within everyone's reach. That wasn't a political decision. It was that of "idealogues" strangely enough. They had seen the predecessor, BBSs, grow in the decade prior. As of 2003, a mere dozen years after public opening of the 'net, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that one in five U.S. homes had some form of Internet access. That IS explosive growth. It keeps on growing. The Internet is now "legacy." Politics had little to do with it. Technology was the spark. Ideology and practicality and convenience did the trick from then on. |
#33
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This country got rid of one lying, deceiving creep and narrowly avoided
electing another. The supreme court appointed the current lying, deceiving creep, despite the fact we did not elect him. |
#34
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![]() "Steve Robeson K4CAP" wrote in message ... Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth From: "Jim Hampton" Date: 6/21/2004 11:30 AM Central Standard Time Message-id: Steve, I have no problem with someone being rich; I have a problem when I pay a higher percentage of my pay to taxes than they do. Just because some people are able to abuse the system, this doesn't mean everyone can succeed in doing so. There are some corrupt individuals at every level of society. It wasn't so many years ago when welfare fraud was making the news on a regular basis. If you will check the IRS data, you will find that people in the top 5% of income provide over 50% of the income tax revenue collected by the government. The top 1% pay over 1/3 of the income taxes collected. The bottom 50% of the people pay less than 4% of the total tax revenues collected. This is hardly letting the rich not pay. The ones who slip through the cracks or find ways to avoid paying are not representative. Unfortunately, they are news so we only hear the bad stuff. But who generates the economic base, Jim? You and I? I don't know you beyond this forum, of course, and you very well may be a business owner for all I know. But very, VERY few of those "rich" are what we would call "idle rich". They got that way because of businesses they ran, which means people they employed, products they sold or services they delivered. Please don't tell me you are so naive that you think that the wealthy always pay a higher percentage in taxes. There's always people who find ways around the system that does not mean they all do. To single out the rich smack based on a few frauds smacks of class envy just as much as denigrating the poor because some of committed welfare fraud smacks of prejudice. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#35
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Hello, Len
Guess I get my dander up too at times. Certainly it is wrong to paint "all" Republicans or "all" Democrates or "all" of any one group with a wide brush. Not good at all. Besides, I've gotten led off-topic - not good at all. I have figured it out, Len. The problem is we are dropping the Morse requirements. Dang, now my washing machine is going to over-suds again ![]() However, BPL should help the situation. If BPL is going to reduce power line noise (according to power companies), it should reduce my washer over-sudsing since it runs from the mains. LOL. Have a good one! 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.708 / Virus Database: 464 - Release Date: 6/18/04 |
#36
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In article , "Jim Hampton"
writes: Guess I get my dander up too at times. Certainly it is wrong to paint "all" Republicans or "all" Democrates or "all" of any one group with a wide brush. Not good at all. Besides, I've gotten led off-topic - not good at all. Some folks with opposite and contrary personal agendas WILL do that! :-) I have figured it out, Len. The problem is we are dropping the Morse requirements. Dang, now my washing machine is going to over-suds again ![]() Har! However, BPL should help the situation. If BPL is going to reduce power line noise (according to power companies), it should reduce my washer over-sudsing since it runs from the mains. LOL. There ya go! :-) But, speaking seriously on BPL. A Cedar Rapids ham group got motivated and really organized for a measurement of a small BPL trial installation in Cedar Rapids, IA. [the city may be a familiar one as Collins Radio is located there] Darn good Comment under docket 03-47 under 21 June 2004 in the FCC ECFS. First part is long at about 1.3 MB, being the certified by PE test report, second part is shorter, the text comment itself. I will give that Cedar Rapids group a large hand of applause for their effort. Complete and to the point. |
#37
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"Jim Hampton" wrote in message ...
"William" wrote in message om... "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... Yes, We got rid of Nixon. Now we need to dump Bush. Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA Nixon resigned. We impeached Clinton because he didn't have the decency to resign. Nixon resigned after his friends on Capitol Hill told him they couldn't muster enough votes to avoid throwing him out of office. End of story. No, not the end of the story. But there would be no point in discussing it with a closed-minded person such as yourself. Clinton was not removed from office. Then what was the purpose of impeaching him? He thwarted the efforts of honest people by not having the decency to leave. What Clinton did was terrible to his wife and daughter, I really don't want to know what he did to his wife and daughter. The details of what he did to Monica was bad enough. but what damage to the country (other than a major distraction) did it do? Our government and our monetary system is a confidence game. When our leaders go south, our confidence goes south, and our economy goes south. Are you so naive as to think that this huge deficit Bush is running won't hurt us? Are you so naive as to think that we haven't seen huge defecits before, even when they were for unnecessary social spending? Already some want to reduce social security more. It isn't that social security is broke (and it appears to be in a bit better shape than they thought, But, assuming that you are a Social Security recipient, you just got a prescription drug benefit. but as good jobs disappear and are replaced by near minimum-wage jobs, I wouldn't bet); Yes, swapping out our manufacturing jobs for service jobs is the wrong path. it is that the federal government has tapped the funds and issued IOUs to social security. They don't want to pay back money They'll just print more. Remember the "confidence game?" to the folks that need it the most. Rob from the poor and give to the rich. I'm beginning to think that I'll never be able to retire and spend my Golden Years learning fast code like I have wanted to. Instead I'll be working to support people who no longer work or never did work. Go figure; make $1,000,000 on the stock market and you only pay $150,000 in tax (15%). Now, go get a $60,000 a year job and see what you pay in taxes. Don't forget that over 7.5% social security tax you pay (and my pension is reduced slightly due to my employer's social security contribution. Retirement based on income above the tax base results in higher percentage payment.) when you figure your tax load. I have been pondering the concept of "individual" and that of "corporation." I'm told that a corporation has the rights of an individual. A corporation has inputs and outputs. When the outputs excede the inputs, it is called profit. The profit is taxed. An individual has inputs and outputs. All inputs are taxed. Well, we finally got our high-speed ferry here in Rochester. Like all other high-profile projects (the new soccer stadium, the baseball stadium), the owners paid *far* less than they were originally supposed to. The taxpayers picked up the tab. The Church of Sweat. Sports are a religion. Seperation of Church and State. Now we pay for security here, but Canada won't pay over there. Net result, before the first outing, prices were raised on vehicles and occupants as the ferry operator had to pay for security in Canada. Now, yesterday, we found out that for some reason the ferry folks got to take over most of the paved parking in a *public* park close to the ferry. I wonder why, since they raised the cost per vehicle. A *public* park, but in those spaces, they charge you $5.00 per day to park. I used to pay for parking in St. Louis. I can't deduct parking as part of my costs to earn my income. Where are all of the whiners that complain about welfare? Oh, I forgot; that doesn't apply to *corporate* welfare. It does. Compassionate conservative *IS* an oxymoron. I don't need any more idiots in Washington running *huge* deficits to benefit the rich. Bush is spending money like a drunken sailor or marine. I'm tired of it. Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.708 / Virus Database: 464 - Release Date: 6/18/04 |
#38
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Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: (William) Date: 6/22/2004 6:05 AM Central Standard Time Message-id: "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... "William" wrote in message om... "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... Yes, We got rid of Nixon. Now we need to dump Bush. Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA Nixon resigned. We impeached Clinton because he didn't have the decency to resign. Nixon resigned after his friends on Capitol Hill told him they couldn't muster enough votes to avoid throwing him out of office. End of story. No, not the end of the story. But there would be no point in discussing it with a closed-minded person such as yourself. Brain-to-English Translation: "Uh oh...I'm getting backed into yet another corner...Better make an excuse and bug-out while I am still ahead" Clinton was not removed from office. Then what was the purpose of impeaching him? He thwarted the efforts of honest people by not having the decency to leave. Yep. What Clinton did was terrible to his wife and daughter, I really don't want to know what he did to his wife and daughter. The details of what he did to Monica was bad enough. but what damage to the country (other than a major distraction) did it do? Our government and our monetary system is a confidence game. When our leaders go south, our confidence goes south, and our economy goes south. Oh CRAP!....Brian and I are in complete agreement with something! THIS is SCARY! Are you so naive as to think that this huge deficit Bush is running won't hurt us? Are you so naive as to think that we haven't seen huge defecits before, even when they were for unnecessary social spending? THAT'S TWICE! I am getting a cold shivver! Already some want to reduce social security more. It isn't that social security is broke (and it appears to be in a bit better shape than they thought, But, assuming that you are a Social Security recipient, you just got a prescription drug benefit. but as good jobs disappear and are replaced by near minimum-wage jobs, I wouldn't bet); Yes, swapping out our manufacturing jobs for service jobs is the wrong path. It's a DIFFERENT path. We can do both, it's just the transition that's worrisome. We demand "change" but get paranoid and run scared when someone actually does it! I'm beginning to think that I'll never be able to retire and spend my Golden Years learning fast code like I have wanted to. Instead I'll be working to support people who no longer work or never did work. No one "learn(s)" "fast code"...One ACHIEVES it through practice and use. You either know the Morse Code or you don't. Otherwise I share some of the same concerns...Good thing to have other money in the bank, but I wonder what scam will arise in order to get their hands on THAT! Compassionate conservative *IS* an oxymoron. I don't need any more idiots in Washington running *huge* deficits to benefit the rich. Bush is spending money like a drunken sailor or marine. I'm tired of it. And you expect WHAT to be different if a Demoncrat is elected? 73 Steve, K4YZ |
#39
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![]() "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... Hello, Len Guess I get my dander up too at times. Certainly it is wrong to paint "all" Republicans or "all" Democrates or "all" of any one group with a wide brush. Not good at all. Besides, I've gotten led off-topic - not good at all. I have figured it out, Len. The problem is we are dropping the Morse requirements. Dang, now my washing machine is going to over-suds again ![]() However, BPL should help the situation. If BPL is going to reduce power line noise (according to power companies), it should reduce my washer over-sudsing since it runs from the mains. LOL. It's not that BPL will reduce power line noise but rather that the companies must reduce the noise to get BPL to work!! Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#40
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![]() "William" wrote in message m... "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... "William" wrote in message om... "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... What Clinton did was terrible to his wife and daughter, I really don't want to know what he did to his wife and daughter. The details of what he did to Monica was bad enough. but what damage to the country (other than a major distraction) did it do? Our government and our monetary system is a confidence game. When our leaders go south, our confidence goes south, and our economy goes south. What bothered me is that since Clinton lied about something so unimportant, what might he do to cover up something that was much more important. At the time, I had several German friends and they were totally baffled about why he bothered to lie. To some extent, this probably hurt his standing with foreign leaders though my memory tells me that as a whole Europe loved Clinton. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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