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#1
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Reference Number: 127393
Physical Location: Baton Rouge, LA Department: E&I Min. Years Experience: N/A Min. Education: N/A Job Description: http://www.recruitingsite.com/CSBSit...bNumber=127393 Craftsmen or Subcontractors skilled in construction, service or recovery operations to aid in the Hurricane Katrina recovery activities. Subcontractors submitting information, please include under the resume section a brief summary of the previous work your company has performed and the types/categories of contractors you have available. -- 73, de Hans, K0HB -- Homepage: http://www.home.earthlink.net/~k0hb Member: ARRL http://www.arrl.org SOC http://www.qsl.net/soc VWOA http://www.vwoa.org A-1 Operator Club http://www.arrl.org/awards/a1-op/ TCDXA http://www.tcdxa.org MWA http://www.w0aa.org TCFMC http://www.tcfmc.org FISTS http://www.fists.org LVDXA http://www.upstel.net/borken/lvdxa.htm NCI http://www.nocode.org |
#2
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: Reference Number: 127393 Physical Location: Baton Rouge, LA Department: E&I Min. Years Experience: N/A Min. Education: N/A Job Description: http://www.recruitingsite.com/CSBSit...on.asp?SiteID= =3D10063&JobNumber=3D127393 Craftsmen or Subcontractors skilled in construction, service or recovery operations to aid in the Hurricane Katrina recovery activities. Subcontractors submitting information, please include under the resume section a brief summary of the previous work your company has performed and the types/categories of contractors you have available. -- 73, de Hans, K0HB Hmmmm? How's come they're not looking for a couple of good CW Ops? |
#3
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![]() wrote How's come they're not looking for a couple of good CW Ops? The Guamanian judges give Brian 9.8 on the Olympic Troll-O-Meter, but they were over-ruled by the umpires in instant replay, who award it a 2.7 The Guamanian judges lodged a formal protest! It was sufficiently trollish, of course, but way too obvious. It was poorly written, poorly executed, and was so incredibly lame as to lack the true drawing power of a really masterful troll. Maybe as high as a 2.9 for the sheer dump huck stupidity of the premise, but a 9.8? Never! The Guamanian judges tear their hair out, throw their balalaikas down in dismay, and perform the traditional Chamorran Dismay Chant! They demand a recount! Hafa Adai, Hans, Lord High Keeper of the Troll-O-Meter |
#4
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: wrote How's come they're not looking for a couple of good CW Ops? The Guamanian judges give Brian 9.8 on the Olympic Troll-O-Meter, but they were over-ruled by the umpires in instant replay, who award it a 2.7 The Guamanian judges lodged a formal protest! It was sufficiently trollish, of course, but way too obvious. It was poorly written, poorly executed, and was so incredibly lame as to lack the true drawing power of a really masterful troll. Maybe as high as a 2.9 for the sheer dump huck stupidity of the premise, but a 9.8? Never! The Guamanian judges tear their hair out, throw their balalaikas down in dismay, and perform the traditional Chamorran Dismay Chant! They demand a recount! Hafa Adai, Hans, Lord High Keeper of the Troll-O-Meter The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going for as long as they were able to. The Guamanian judges got it right: 9.8! |
#5
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![]() wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, craftsmen, and subcontractors? |
#6
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KØHB wrote:
wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, craftsmen, and subcontractors? Sorry Hans - All subjects turn into CW in here! Sorry folks, I just had to..... ;^) - Mike KB3EIA - |
#7
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, cra= ftsmen, and subcontractors? You should advertise for this company in a more applicable group. This group is for the express purpose of discussing amateur radio policy, especially morse code policy. Thank you for your concern. |
#8
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... KØHB wrote: wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, craftsmen, and subcontractors? You should advertise for this company in a more applicable group. This group is for the express purpose of discussing amateur radio policy, especially morse code policy. Thank you for your concern. ******** AA2QA's reply seperator ********* What you do not seem to realize is that the folks that actually learned something (before the multiple guess answers came out), just might have a few skills. These are usually folks that have a genuine interest in how things work, not how to turn a knob or push a button or keys. This isn't to say that folks that simply wish to talk are not welcome; they certainly are. Although I do not possess a college degree, I am a certified electronics technician. I have repaired two-way radios (business and trunking radios). I have done a lot of electrical control and power wiring. I have not worked in high voltage, but have done a fair amount of 277/480 3 phase work. I've climbed atop silos and repaired bag houses. Welded, soldered, cut, run milling machines, surface grinders, lathes, and more. If a saws-all can't do the job readily, the oxy-acetylene tourch will handle it well for me (hmmmm ... wonder how that would solder pl-259s? LOL). Done EMC compliance studies along with UL compliance. Come to think of it, ozone compliance. Can you spell exponential decay? Come to think of it, I've programmed slc-500s, Texas Instruments PLCs, Modicon PLCs, and more (including data highways and ethernet). Even written a program to generate ladders from simply inputting I/O assignments and letting the program know what I want to have happen. Under 15 minutes to properly program 3 cells. Another 5 minutes to debug because someone wired a switch backwards (normally closed rather than normally open). The nice thing about amateur radio is that it encompasses a whole spectrum of individuals, unlike most trade magazines. To me, advertising in an amateur publication such as QST would make a lot of sense, especially if you are trying to locate a number of different skills (rather than a number of ads in different magazines or newspapers). As to Morse, it can be fun. If we had difficulty with it back when (for me, 1962), we learned to overcome that difficulty (not a bad thing to learn, in my humble opinion). Come to think of it, as much grief as it gave me (when memorizing dots and dashes), once I learned it by sound, I enjoyed it and by 1967 had perfect copy at 40 words per minute in the U.S. Navy. More than 40? I don't know; that was the fastest test they had back then. I would have had difficulty much beyond that as we were banging away with manual typewriters then. I might have (possibly) made 50 at most. Disclaimer - that would be perfect typewritten copy filling close to a whole page of paper. A few errors would have allowed me considerably faster copy. Then. (LOL) I'd suggest rethinking your position. Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
#9
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![]() Jim Hampton wrote: wrote in message oups.com... K=D8HB wrote: wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, craftsmen, and subcontractors? You should advertise for this company in a more applicable group. This group is for the express purpose of discussing amateur radio policy, especially morse code policy. Thank you for your concern. ******** AA2QA's reply seperator ********* What you do not seem to realize is that the folks that actually learned something (before the multiple guess answers came out), just might have a few skills. which is beside the point. This a radio newsgroup |
#10
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![]() Jim Hampton wrote: wrote in message oups.com... K=D8HB wrote: wrote The sheer stupidity of the premise is what kept the Morse Forever warriors going...... Which has WTF to do with a company advertising for telephone linemen, craftsmen, and subcontractors? You should advertise for this company in a more applicable group. This group is for the express purpose of discussing amateur radio policy, especially morse code policy. Thank you for your concern. ******** AA2QA's reply seperator ********* What you do not seem to realize is that the folks that actually learned something (before the multiple guess answers came out), just might have a few skills. Many don't. Or if they did, they have long forgotten them. Do you disagree? These are usually folks that have a genuine interest in how things work, = not how to turn a knob or push a button or keys. This isn't to say that folks that simply wish to talk are not welcome; they certainly are. Such as epistemology? Although I do not possess a college degree, I am a certified electronics technician. I have repaired two-way radios (business and trunking radios= )=2E I have done a lot of electrical control and power wiring. I have not wor= ked in high voltage, but have done a fair amount of 277/480 3 phase work. I'= ve climbed atop silos and repaired bag houses. Welded, soldered, cut, run milling machines, surface grinders, lathes, and more. If a saws-all can't do the job readily, the oxy-acetylene tourch will handle it well for me (hmmmm ... wonder how that would solder pl-259s? LOL). Done EMC complia= nce studies along with UL compliance. Come to think of it, ozone compliance. Can you spell exponential decay? Come to think of it, I've programmed slc-500s, Texas Instruments PLCs, Modicon PLCs, and more (including data highways and ethernet). Even written a program to generate ladders from simply inputting I/O assignments and letting the program know what I want= to have happen. Under 15 minutes to properly program 3 cells. Another 5 minutes to debug because someone wired a switch backwards (normally closed rather than normally open). It that anything like serving at at military switch 50 years ago? The nice thing about amateur radio is that it encompasses a whole spectrum of individuals, unlike most trade magazines. To me, advertising in an amateur publication such as QST would make a lot of sense, especially if = you are trying to locate a number of different skills (rather than a number of ads in different magazines or newspapers). Reply to Hans. He has the scoop on the job you're looking for. As to Morse, it can be fun. Jumping into a swimming pool with weights on your feet and chains around your body can be fun, too. Harry H. did it for a while. If we had difficulty with it back when (for me, 1962), we learned to overcome that difficulty (not a bad thing to learn, = in my humble opinion). Are you saying that the people of New Orleans need to learn to overcome difficulty? Come to think of it, as much grief as it gave me (when memorizing dots and dashes), once I learned it by sound, I enjoyed it and= by 1967 had perfect copy at 40 words per minute in the U.S. Navy. Three hots and a cot and Morse Code to boot? More than 40? I don't know; that was the fastest test they had back then. I would have had difficulty much beyond that as we were banging away with manual typewriters then. I might have (possibly) made 50 at most. Disclaimer - that would be perfect typewritten copy filling close to a whole page of paper. A few errors would have allowed me considerably faster copy. The= n=2E (LOL) Fan-fold paper would have been nice, huh? I'd suggest rethinking your position. Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA Rethunk. Hans posting is still off-topic. |
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