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#1
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Shortwave Radio - Google News
/////////////////////////////////////////// Aliens probably look even weirder than we think - Quartz Posted: 01 Oct 2016 02:01 AM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...than-we-think/ Quartz Aliens probably look even weirder than we think Quartz The two scientists further posited that such aliens would have “established a channel of communication that would one day become known to us.” Such alien signals would most likely take the form of shortwave radio, which is ubiquitous through the ... /////////////////////////////////////////// Last living Doolittle Raider recalls America's revenge attack - CNN Posted: 30 Sep 2016 03:53 PM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...ell-dick-cole/ CNN Last living Doolittle Raider recalls Americas revenge attack CNN Soon, all 15 remaining planes followed. The grueling mission had begun. "I remember thinking we had just separated ourselves from civilization," Cole said. "The range of our short-wave radio was only about 45 miles and we were going to be more than 45 ... and more /////////////////////////////////////////// A Brief History of the Microwave Oven - IEEE Spectrum Posted: 30 Sep 2016 12:05 PM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...microwave-oven IEEE Spectrum A Brief History of the Microwave Oven IEEE Spectrum Indeed, at the 1933 Worlds Fair in Chicago, Westinghouse demonstrated a 10-kilowatt shortwave radio transmitter that cooked steaks and potatoes between two metal plates. But nothing came of these culinary adventures. Raytheon engineer Percy Spencer ... /////////////////////////////////////////// Tim Moo I cycled 10000km along the Iron Curtain on a 50 bike - Telegraph.co.uk Posted: 01 Oct 2016 12:44 AM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...-on-a-50-bike/ Telegraph.co.uk Tim Moo I cycled 10000km along the Iron Curtain on a £50 bike Telegraph.co.uk When the writer Tim Moore heard of a new bike trail tracking the old Iron Curtain, he found himself recklessly inspired. To a child of the Cold War who had spent his boyhood twiddling through eerie Soviet signals on a short-wave radio, the freedom to ... |
#2
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Google News via rec.radio.info Admin wrote:
Shortwave Radio - Google News /////////////////////////////////////////// Aliens probably look even weirder than we think - Quartz Posted: 01 Oct 2016 02:01 AM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...than-we-think/ Quartz Aliens probably look even weirder than we think Quartz The two scientists further posited that such aliens would have established a channel of communication that would one day become known to us. Such alien signals would most likely take the form of shortwave radio, which is ubiquitous through the ... They should at least try to keep up. Herman Munster talked to Martians with his ham radio 50 years ago. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqM1xeseX98 |
#3
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On Sat, 1 Oct 2016, analogdial wrote:
Google News via rec.radio.info Admin wrote: Shortwave Radio - Google News /////////////////////////////////////////// Aliens probably look even weirder than we think - Quartz Posted: 01 Oct 2016 02:01 AM PDT http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t...than-we-think/ Quartz Aliens probably look even weirder than we think Quartz The two scientists further posited that such aliens would have established a channel of communication that would one day become known to us. Such alien signals would most likely take the form of shortwave radio, which is ubiquitous through the ... They should at least try to keep up. Herman Munster talked to Martians with his ham radio 50 years ago. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqM1xeseX98 But he didn't win an award. There's actually a cup waiting, has been since the twenties or thirties, for the first ham to contact mars. I guess it was mostly a joke, on the other hand back then Mars wsa big in the news, all those canals. And radio was still developing, going for greater and greater distances, so why not set ones sights on another planet? I'm not sure of the exact rules, though. Michael |
#4
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Michael Black wrote:
On Sat, 1 Oct 2016, analogdial wrote: They should at least try to keep up. Herman Munster talked to Martians with his ham radio 50 years ago. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqM1xeseX98 But he didn't win an award. There's actually a cup waiting, has been since the twenties or thirties, for the first ham to contact mars. I guess it was mostly a joke, on the other hand back then Mars wsa big in the news, all those canals. And radio was still developing, going for greater and greater distances, so why not set ones sights on another planet? I'm not sure of the exact rules, though. Michael Disqualified on a technicality. Herman Munster didn't contact Martians on Mars, but Martians in a spaceship near Earth. |
#5
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On 02/10/16 15:23, analogdial wrote:
Michael Black wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2016, analogdial wrote: They should at least try to keep up. Herman Munster talked to Martians with his ham radio 50 years ago. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqM1xeseX98 But he didn't win an award. There's actually a cup waiting, has been since the twenties or thirties, for the first ham to contact mars. I guess it was mostly a joke, on the other hand back then Mars wsa big in the news, all those canals. And radio was still developing, going for greater and greater distances, so why not set ones sights on another planet? I'm not sure of the exact rules, though. Disqualified on a technicality. Herman Munster didn't contact Martians on Mars, but Martians in a spaceship near Earth. From 2011: "Amateur radio enthusiasts using a restored dish antenna in Germany say they have successfully picked up telemetry from NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft, now outward bound for Mars [...]" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/11...osity_signals/ And 2014: "James Miller, G3RUH, was among a small handful of Amateur Radio operators to receive the X band signal January 21 from the European Space Agencys Rosetta spacecraft, some 500 million miles from Earth. Miller used the 20 meter dish at the Bochum Amateur Radio facility in Germany, run by AMSAT-DL and IUZ Bochum Observatory. In an AMSAT-BB post, Miller noted the frequency at the spacecraft was 8421.786900 MHz, and the signal was 14 dB below that of the STEREO A/B spacecraft. Perhaps more astonishing, Bertrand Pinel, F5PL, was able to track Rosetta 65 kilometers from Toulouse using his home-rigged 3.5 meter dish and receiver. Viljo Allik, ES5PC, a member of Estonian Student Satellite Program team reported his group was able to detect the satellites signal using a slightly smaller dish." http://www.arrl.org/news/radio-amate...rom-deep-space http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2014/01...etta-tracking/ |
#6
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On Sun, 2 Oct 2016, Hils wrote:
On 02/10/16 15:23, analogdial wrote: Michael Black wrote: On Sat, 1 Oct 2016, analogdial wrote: They should at least try to keep up. Herman Munster talked to Martians with his ham radio 50 years ago. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqM1xeseX98 But he didn't win an award. There's actually a cup waiting, has been since the twenties or thirties, for the first ham to contact mars. I guess it was mostly a joke, on the other hand back then Mars wsa big in the news, all those canals. And radio was still developing, going for greater and greater distances, so why not set ones sights on another planet? I'm not sure of the exact rules, though. Disqualified on a technicality. Herman Munster didn't contact Martians on Mars, but Martians in a spaceship near Earth. From 2011: "Amateur radio enthusiasts using a restored dish antenna in Germany say they have successfully picked up telemetry from NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft, now outward bound for Mars [...]" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/11...osity_signals/ And 2014: "James Miller, G3RUH, was among a small handful of Amateur Radio operators to receive the X band signal January 21 from the European Space Agencys Rosetta spacecraft, some 500 million miles from Earth. Miller used the 20 meter dish at the Bochum Amateur Radio facility in Germany, run by AMSAT-DL and IUZ Bochum Observatory. In an AMSAT-BB post, Miller noted the frequency at the spacecraft was 8421.786900 MHz, and the signal was 14 dB below that of the STEREO A/B spacecraft. Perhaps more astonishing, Bertrand Pinel, F5PL, was able to track Rosetta 65 kilometers from Toulouse using his home-rigged 3.5 meter dish and receiver. Viljo Allik, ES5PC, a member of Estonian Student Satellite Program team reported his group was able to detect the satellites signal using a slightly smaller dish." http://www.arrl.org/news/radio-amate...rom-deep-space http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2014/01...etta-tracking/ But for the purposes of most or all amateur radio contests and certificates, the contacts have to be two way. Otherwise, it would be an SWL contest. There was talk, and it actually seemed to have some substance, of sending a amateur radio package to the moon on one of the later manned flights. Someone found empty space in the lunar crawler, so they were working on a repeater to fit in there. The guy died, so the project died, but it looked like they actually had some encouragement from NASA. Some hams wanted to put amateur radio into Skylab and effort was put into that, but it was denied, I can't remember the reasons. Michael |
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