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John Smith wrote:
I imagine from discussions like this, and everyone trying to motivate everyone else into getting enough interested to save the hobby--once I can motivate a young college mind, they study and go advanced almost immediately, energy and exuberance counts!--that increase does not even come close to echoing population growth though... we need TONS more... many hams are 60+, and while everyone hopes they remain with us forever--that wish lies in impossible dreams... all of us will go deadkey at sometime, some sooner--but they will shortly be joined by others and have much company... frown It does, but it also helps to have more cutting edge modes. Let's face it, ax.25 is almost 25 years old and 300 baud data sent from the other side of the world these days has as much appeal as a tepid bowl of oatmeal. Couple that with the fact that radio has pretty much lost its romance and mystique anyway. You'll find plenty of writers who mention sitting with the radio, tubes glowing listening late into the night to their favorite shows or distant lands on shortwave, but you won't find much about cuddling up with the transistor radio listening to AM talk radio. Amateurs need to tap their existing resources, create real high speed spread spectrum modes (the HSMM guys have the right idea) within amateur bands. That'll attract a lot of people, and from there you can generate interests in other modes. Cement cool bonds between computers and amateur radio and you'll have a far better chance at attracting people. |
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