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On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 10:43:03 +0100, "Mark"
wrote: You know what the trouble is with us amateurs is ? Hi Mike, Sure, some of them don't know what "digital" is, your posting contains examples which follow below. We are stuck in the analogue age... We should all be using digital communications by now.. As an isolated statement that is true. There are more modulation modes now than there were 20, 30, 40, 50 years ago, and many of them are digital based - BPL is baseband, not modulation, however I will let that pass for further discussion. There are also digitally based methods of generating an RF frequency of a purity that exceeds all the current Ham radio equipment commercially available, but those methods are not widebanded trash generators. Clearly, digital methods are not necessarily interfering methods - except in the hands of commercial interests with less than amateur talent in marketing dominating their engineer's efforts. Wasn't there a time when amateurs were ahead of commercial design? This is called being stuck in the time warp of 1928 innovation and WWII's need to draft both the Ham and his transmitter because of a shortfall of equipment. Since then, except for rare achievements like exploring Spread Spectrum (which the FCC hamstrung) it has been follow the market. The Amateur community is not about being a class of inventors, but rather a resource pool of savvy and experienced technicians and engineers who could be relied upon to reign in the self-interests of decadent commercialism. This dialogue is one clear and obvious example of both that talent's exercise, and the stonewalling of a crypto-fascist administration. Now all we do is complain when the commercial world brings out new technology that causes a problem with our old technology. I presume by the inclusive nature of "we" that you are against new technology? If not, then your argument contains its own self-negation. If so, then your argument is what psychology calls "projection" WE do not necessarily share YOUR problem. Look at the big picture people... We are still using analogue communications.. Blimey , even my home phone is digital. My CD player is digital, my TV is digital. And in this last statement, "we" find your poor understanding of the problem in general, and the concept of what digital is, in particular. Your TV is analogue even if your remote tuner is digital. Even there, your remote tuner is not digital, it is CW (albeit with a different code set). CW is one of the oldest modes around. That IR beam that communicates with your big bottle across the room sends a chopped light beam that is in now way OCTAL nor HEXIDECIMAL but closer to Baudot. This is about as close to "digital" as you are in the living room, and Amateur equipment has had this advantage for quite a long time now (Baudot has been with amateur service for at least 60 years). As for your home phone or CD player, if you have any impression that you are actually listening to "digital" you are indeed the product of genetic manipulation and should rush a sample of your DNA to the nearest patent office to claim your birthright is actually intellectual property. Again, any "digital" property found in these commonplace AND LINEAR devices is and has been found in Amateur equipment for a very long time now. If this is news to you, you can then appreciate your unique problem of "projecting" your lack of understanding on others and calling them out for being against technology. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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