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#11
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![]() Slow Code wrote: Just thought you should know that. OTOH SC I am not disqualified from being a real ham by your title |
#12
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Are you ****ing stoned???
If it weren't for no code, there would be no new Hams! Another 20 years and all you legitimate code endorsed hams will be dx'ing with the worms. We have to go with the times fool! We've already lost 80% of interest to the Internet and all the IM's email and all.. You clearly are living in the dark ages.. If we are to save amateur radio at all, we need numbers. We've already lost too much spectrum due to the lack of use. So what if no code'rs gain access to HF? It's either that or we loose HF to the commercial interests. I took the 13 and used code a grand total of one time in the last 16 years. Asshole. "Slow Code" wrote in message nk.net... Just thought you should know that. Help save Ham radio and ignore Markie to save usenet. Thanks 1- No more automatic renewals. Individuals must retest and pass all elements required for their license class every ten years. 2- The passing score for written exams needs to be raised to 85%. 3- Code elements should be 13 wpm for General, and 20 wpm for Extra. 4- Make the no-code license one year non-renewable. 5- Cancel your ARRL membership until they decide to work to improve things and stop them from proposing ham radio that is like CB. |
#13
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On Sun, 23 Jul 2006 21:13:25 -0700, "Jimmy Mac"
wrote: Another 20 years and all you legitimate code endorsed hams will be dx'ing with the worms. We have to go with the times fool! Oh? Then you're in favor of REAL testing about digital modes? Like questions on how Rayleigh fading limits bit rates on HF? That sort of "the times"? (Or didn't you know that, without frame shifting, digital modes cause problems on HF?) Or are you one of those who favors as little testing as can be gotten away with? If we are to save amateur radio at all, we need numbers. So you'd rather have millions of unqualified hams who know nothing about radio than a few hundred thousand who do. We already have a Citizen's Band - we don't need a dozen more of them. |
#14
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Al Klein wrote:
On Sat, 22 Jul 2006 08:45:57 -0400, "ohioradioham" wrote: Blow Code - your ideas will damn amateur radio and kill it. That's evidently why the number of hams kept decreasing until code was eliminated, right? The drop would have been far worse than it is now had the CW testing speed not been reduced. Oh, wait a minute - the numbers didn't START decreasing until code was eliminated. Sorry Al, but the drop of CW came around the explosion of the Internet. Young people see our hobby as outdated and the CW testing requirement reinforces that. What to see a huge drop in licenses? Bring back CW testing for all licenses and raise the speeds again. There will be hardly any new licenses issued if someone made such a gross and stupid error in judgement. Forcing CW onto newcomers will only turn them away from amateur radio since CW is seen by outsiders as old-fashioned and out-of-date. This is the 21st Century and people do not want to be forced to learn and use and communication method developed in the 19th Century. People today don't want to be forced to learn - whether it's CW, or how to build a trivial little interface between a transceiver (modern invention) and a computer (another modern invention), or some antenna theory. Just hand them a license and a radio and they want to be on the air. Grow up and face reality. Reality is that ham radio is turning into a multi-band CB - just buy a radio and get on the air without actually knowing how it works or how to use it. CW testing has nothing to do with knowing how the radio works or how it operates. Thanks for reinforcing some of my previous positions. The ham bands were filled with idiots when we had all that CW testing. CW testing has never kept out the idiots and never will. Besides, since the US is a democracy, the ham bands will turn into whatever we let it turn into because the majority rules and CW freaks like yourself are increasingly in the minority. |
#15
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Al Klein wrote:
Or are you one of those who favors as little testing as can be gotten away with? Yup, as a person who has been a ham for 35 years, yup that's what I believe. If we are to save amateur radio at all, we need numbers. I absolutely agree. So you'd rather have millions of unqualified hams who know nothing about radio than a few hundred thousand who do. Yup, that's what I also believe. Get people into the service and they will start learning what they need to know on their own. We already have a Citizen's Band - we don't need a dozen more of them. Actually the CB argument is really old. I got a CB radio for a trip two years ago so my 20 something daughters could talk on it. The reality is that hardly anyone is on CB either. Channel 19 was pretty quiet compared to what is sounded like 20 years ago. So not only are people avoiding ham radio, they are also avoiding CB. Find a new argument Al for keeping people out of ham radio will you? |
#16
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"Steve" wrote in
: Ya, and you're not a 'real' bowler either unless you have a $500 bowling ball. And you're not a 'real' fisherman until you've caught a Marlin off the coast of Mexico either. It's only a hobby. If you don't like it, pick another one! It's not just a hobby, read part 97 again. If you wanted just a hobby you should've stuck to CB and Stamp collecting. Help save Ham radio and ignore Mark to save usenet: 1- No more automatic renewals. Individuals must retest and pass all elements required for their license class every ten years. 2- The passing score for written exams needs to be raised to 85%. 3- Code elements should be 13 wpm for General, and 20 wpm for Extra. 4- Make the no-code license one year non-renewable. 5- Cancel your ARRL membership until they decide to work to improve things and stop them from proposing ham radio that is like CB. |
#17
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Slow Code wrote:
"Steve" wrote in : Ya, and you're not a 'real' bowler either unless you have a $500 bowling ball. And you're not a 'real' fisherman until you've caught a Marlin off the coast of Mexico either. It's only a hobby. If you don't like it, pick another one! It's not just a hobby, read part 97 again. If you wanted just a hobby you should've stuck to CB and Stamp collecting. sure it is a hobby with service related aspects rather the Boy Scouts are supposed to be Help save Ham radio and ignore Mark to save usenet: if one wants to Help save Ham radio SC needs to get a life |
#18
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On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 08:49:35 -0400, "J. D. B."
wrote: Young people see our hobby as outdated and the CW testing requirement reinforces that. What to see a huge drop in licenses? Bring back CW testing for all licenses and raise the speeds again. There will be hardly any new licenses issued if someone made such a gross and stupid error in judgement. The drop started MANY years before CW was dropped. Want to increase the number of hams? Eliminate cellular phones (a lot of people got on the air to have communications in the car) and the internet - since those are two of the prime causes of lack of interest in ham radio today. CW testing has nothing to do with knowing how the radio works or how it operates. But many of the same people who want to eliminate CW also want to eliminate any tests that would really test for knowledge. It's not CW they want to eliminate, it's effort. You can cheat on written tests but, since you can't cheat much on CW (although some have), they want it eliminated. Not just kept for one class of license. What's wrong with code-free HF, but an additional class with, say, a 20wpm CW test? It would have nothing to do with the number of people becoming hams. But those who are opposed to CW testing are opposed to ALL CW testing. Getting on the air - with the highest class license available is, to them, their right. It's like people who are adamantly opposed to having driver's licenses revoked because "driving is a right". Sorry, but getting on the public airwaves is not a right. Besides, since the US is a democracy, the ham bands will turn into whatever we let it turn into because the majority rules Democracy is a form of government that protects the minority from the excesses of the majority - the majority doesn't need protection from itself. |
#19
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On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 08:56:58 -0400, "J. D. B."
wrote: Yup, that's what I also believe. Get people into the service and they will start learning what they need to know on their own. What color is the sky on your world? (If you were correct, most CBers would have a pretty good knowledge of electronics and propagation.) So not only are people avoiding ham radio, they are also avoiding CB. So how does CW enter into things? Find a new argument Al for keeping people out of ham radio will you? Oh? It's not MY argument that CW keeps people from using radios, it's YOURS! And you just destroyed your own best argument. |
#20
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![]() Slow Code wrote: Just thought you should know that. Help save Ham radio and ignore Markie to save usenet. Thanks 1- No more automatic renewals. Individuals must retest and pass all elements required for their license class every ten years. 2- The passing score for written exams needs to be raised to 85%. 3- Code elements should be 13 wpm for General, and 20 wpm for Extra. 4- Make the no-code license one year non-renewable. 5- Cancel your ARRL membership until they decide to work to improve things and stop them from proposing ham radio that is like CB. |
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