View Single Post
  #19   Report Post  
Old August 5th 13, 11:52 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
[email protected] karabas2001@yahoo.com is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: May 2012
Posts: 341
Default It's all over for Monitoring Times

On Monday, August 5, 2013 2:09:04 AM UTC-4, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
wrote:



This is probably the biggest problem in most advanced countries today-


young people cannot do /make anything . Very disturbing, to say the least...




It's not just young people. Once the Apollo program was canceled NASA,

and the entire aerospace industry started to fold. By the 1980's there

no longer existed in the US the capability of putting another man on

the moon.



Now, the US has no capability of launching a person into orbit and have

to rely on the Soviets ^H^H^H^H^H Russian Federation to do so.



There still is the capability of using a missile to launch a satellite,

but the trick of using the space shuttle to catch one, and bring it

back for repair is done.



Along with this decline the 1959 rush to get everyone in the US a college

education, along with the cheap student loans, subsidized tution and

government funded expansion of colleges and universities is gone.



The only thing that is left is the much more competivie admission polices

and the restuctured college boards.



Around the turn of the century, the tests were "re-normed" to lower the

standards (raise the scores by 100 points on each test). That did not

do very well, so an essay was added. The thing about essays is that

they are all scored by people and are very culture dependent.



So a mathematical genius with communications issues will fail misserably,

along with a child who has had a different education than what they

are looking for.



But don't lose hope, things have changed. Children no longer live in isolation

with only newspapers to find out what has happened. As my parents learned

about the world via radio, I learned via television, my children learn

through the internet.



My oldest son does not live with me, he's married and off with his own

family, so I don't keep track of him. He is a "world class" (i.e. published)

expert in data visualization, something did not exist on the TTY that I

had in my bedroom (with modem) in high school.



His brothers have high speed internet, cellular phones, pocket devices

(both have iPods touch, one has an android phone, the other an android

tablet), and see the world a lot differently than we did.



When I was a teenager, you could feed a family of 6 at the local burger

joint for the cost of a one minute phone call between New York and LA.



We all have unlimited cellular plans with international calling in 26

countries and they use text voice chat everyday to communicate with

people around the world. The only continent they don't regularly

communicate with is Antartica.



Making things is a problem, yes, they have no interest in what we

called "shop". I had wood, metal, ceramic, and auto in high school, I did

not have electrical shop so I went into computers instead of becoming a

ham radio operator, something I did in my 40's.



We shall see what happens as 3d printers are coming down in price, and

I think all the stuff they used to make from Legos, paper and scotch tape

will in a few years be made on them.



Eventually they will design things on the computer, print them out

in plastic on their 3d printer and have them made in metal if needed.



Geoff.





--

Geoffrey S. Mendelson, N3OWJ/4X1GM/KBUH7245/KBUW5379


I don't see how a cancellation of just one space program could have caused the future generation not try building/constructing/inventing new gadjets . Oh, btw the Russians may lose Baikonur Cosmodrome in 2014... That is very difficult to comprehend, considering it has been operating (non-stop) all the way since 1957!