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#21
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an old freind wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: In 1953, as a sophomore in high school, I didn't know any electronics and was therefore forced to memorize the ARRL License Manual in order to get my Conditional license. People like me have been memorizing License Manuals for more than half a century. at the risk of seeming foolish but the answer will make a point here I think your license did PRECEED your becoming an EE didn't it, by some many years My amateur radio license, obtaining by memorizing the ARRL License Manual in 1952-1953, was the catalyst that caused me to seek and obtain a EE degree later in 1959. The point is that an amateur radio license is a learner's permit to exercise certain privileges during a lifetime of learning. It is a permit, not a graduation certificate. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#22
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David G. Nagel wrote:
The CW text requirement is like the requirement for a foreign language requirement for some college degrees, ... I carefully avoided any foreign language requirement for my BS EE. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#23
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On 17 Jul 2006 20:12:08 -0700, "an old feind"
wrote: Al Klein wrote: Just show most hams licensed in the past 10 years a schematic and ask them to find a component by function. I can even my wife who frankly does not the why ofof it can tel the component I said "by function". Not "locate the resistor", but "locate the balanced modulator circuitry". You used to have to draw a few schematics on blank paper - no hints. Now you have to be able to identify a resistor. Big deal - that should take all of 3 seconds to memorize. Memorizing which side of the heart sends out the oxygenated blood doesn't make you a cardiac surgeon. |
#24
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![]() Al Klein wrote: On 17 Jul 2006 20:12:08 -0700, "an old feind" wrote: Al Klein wrote: Just show most hams licensed in the past 10 years a schematic and ask them to find a component by function. I can even my wife who frankly does not the why ofof it can tel the component I said "by function". Not "locate the resistor", but "locate the balanced modulator circuitry". you were vague not my fault you can't express yourself You used to have to draw a few schematics on blank paper - no hints. so? you used to have as purely pacitcal matter build at at least some of your station Now you have to be able to identify a resistor. Big deal - that should take all of 3 seconds to memorize. Memorizing which side of the heart sends out the oxygenated blood doesn't make you a cardiac surgeon. nor is a EE needed to be ham and contrube to advancing the state of the radio art the tests needed to cover those things THEN THEN they more os less needed to inculde Morse code (lathough it could have been avoided but for the treaty) times change adapt or die |
#25
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Cecil Moore wrote:
David G. Nagel wrote: The CW text requirement is like the requirement for a foreign language requirement for some college degrees, ... I carefully avoided any foreign language requirement for my BS EE. Computer program was substituted for foreign language where I went to college. Dave |
#26
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David G. Nagel wrote:
Computer program was substituted for foreign language where I went to college. At Texas A&M in the late '50's, a BA in EE required a foreign language but a BS didn't. Don't know why. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#27
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On 18 Jul 2006 15:04:01 -0700, "an old freind"
wrote: Al Klein wrote: On 17 Jul 2006 20:12:08 -0700, "an old feind" wrote: Just show most hams licensed in the past 10 years a schematic and ask them to find a component by function. I can even my wife who frankly does not the why ofof it can tel the component I said "by function". Not "locate the resistor", but "locate the balanced modulator circuitry". you were vague I said, "ask them to find a component by function". That's only vague to those who don't understand simple English. not my fault you can't express yourself Not in what you use for language but, then, I speak English. nor is a EE needed to be ham and contrube to advancing the state of the radio art No one said otherwise - but refusing to learn anything shouldn't be a criterion, and it certainly doesn't contribute to anything but sloth. the tests needed to cover those things THEN THEN they more os less needed to inculde Morse code (lathough it could have been avoided but for the treaty) times change adapt or die Oh, I could pass a test on the technical aspects of communications as it's practiced today. Could you? (Rhetorical question - I know you couldn't.) And I don't mean could you memorize enough answers to pass. |
#28
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On Tue, 18 Jul 2006 20:21:22 -0500, "David G. Nagel"
wrote: Computer program was substituted for foreign language where I went to college. Computer programming wasn't (as in, didn't exist), when I went to college. ![]() |
#29
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On Wed, 19 Jul 2006 03:10:39 GMT, Cecil Moore
wrote: At Texas A&M in the late '50's, a BA in EE required a foreign language but a BS didn't. Don't know why. Language is an art? |
#30
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Al Klein wrote:
On Wed, 19 Jul 2006 03:10:39 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote: At Texas A&M in the late '50's, a BA in EE required a foreign language but a BS didn't. Don't know why. Language is an art? Back in the olden days a BA degree focused on art, humanities, language, sociology, etc. Back in the olden days a BS degree focused on math, more math, physics, chemistry, biological sciences, etc. The basic difference was M A T H ... M O R E M A T H ... then four or more semesters of C A L C U L U S. In fifty years I've forgotten most of that MATH and Calculus stuff, but I still like to read about the humanities, history, sociology. That must mean something. My degree, like Cecil's, is a BS [That does not stand for Bull S...] |
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