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#1
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#2
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BPL sound so nice until you get to the pollution aspect (RFI).
As I told the Atlanta based Earthlink CEO, hams will be a nuisance until one of us ingresses (not really as its not inside a cable) and blocks out the entire system. Then the stuff will really hit the fan. A national article stating that ham radio op KX3XXX imterfered with the city of YYYYY's cable system would do it, 73 Dave K4JRB "Cecil Moore" wrote in message . .. http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTUA3O7.html |
#3
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Ham radio is gradually on its way out. The authorities will not allow
it to interfere with other forms of radio transmission. In any case, insofar as the authorities are concerned, ham radio is an insecure means of communication. It is difficult to intercept, monitor and control the traffic which passes over it. Even radio broadcasting is being pushed onto the Internet. It will be noticed the BBC international broadcasts are not now beamed to the USA but are advertised as being readily available to USA listeners via the Internet. The Internet is easily intercepted, monitored and controlled by the authorities. Whoever THEY may be. They who own and control the means of communication, including that via satellites, will rule the Earth. ---- Reg. |
#4
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Cecil Moore wrote:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTUA3O7.html One of the strangest things I've seen in the computer world is that now that we have all been sold on wireless, they now want us to connect to a wall outlet again! For the non-computer savvy, being disconnect from the wall is an important thing (probably is for a lot of the savvy also) - mike KB3EIA - |
#5
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Reg Edwards wrote:
Ham radio is gradually on its way out. The authorities will not allow it to interfere with other forms of radio transmission. In any case, insofar as the authorities are concerned, ham radio is an insecure means of communication. It is difficult to intercept, monitor and control the traffic which passes over it. Even radio broadcasting is being pushed onto the Internet. It will be noticed the BBC international broadcasts are not now beamed to the USA but are advertised as being readily available to USA listeners via the Internet. The Internet is easily intercepted, monitored and controlled by the authorities. Whoever THEY may be. They who own and control the means of communication, including that via satellites, will rule the Earth. Reg! So gloomy today.... - Mike KB3EIA - |
#6
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On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 15:55:48 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTUA3O7.html Little confusing -- the story doesn't explain how the signal gets to the house -- via power lines, cable, phone, wireless? Regardless, guess the house would be a buzz bomb of hash. bob k5qwg |
#7
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Reg Edwards wrote:
Ham radio is gradually on its way out. The authorities will not allow it to interfere with other forms of radio transmission. In any case, insofar as the authorities are concerned, ham radio is an insecure means of communication. It is difficult to intercept, monitor and control the traffic which passes over it. Even radio broadcasting is being pushed onto the Internet. It will be noticed the BBC international broadcasts are not now beamed to the USA but are advertised as being readily available to USA listeners via the Internet. The Internet is easily intercepted, monitored and controlled by the authorities. Whoever THEY may be. They who own and control the means of communication, including that via satellites, will rule the Earth. ---- Reg. When I learned that the BBC wasn't available on shortwave, I made no effort to listen to it on the Internet. The magic was gone. I could no longer take my battery-powered HF radio out in the country or in my car (no, I don't have satellite radio) and listen to BBC. The programming was fantastic. What a loss. There goes another thing I really enjoyed. John |
#8
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On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 01:57:56 GMT, John - KD5YI
wrote: Reg Edwards wrote: Ham radio is gradually on its way out. The authorities will not allow it to interfere with other forms of radio transmission. In any case, insofar as the authorities are concerned, ham radio is an insecure means of communication. It is difficult to intercept, monitor and control the traffic which passes over it. Even radio broadcasting is being pushed onto the Internet. It will be noticed the BBC international broadcasts are not now beamed to the USA but are advertised as being readily available to USA listeners via the Internet. The Internet is easily intercepted, monitored and controlled by the authorities. Whoever THEY may be. They who own and control the means of communication, including that via satellites, will rule the Earth. ---- Reg. When I learned that the BBC wasn't available on shortwave, I made no effort to listen to it on the Internet. The magic was gone. I could no longer take my battery-powered HF radio out in the country or in my car (no, I don't have satellite radio) and listen to BBC. The programming was fantastic. What a loss. There goes another thing I really enjoyed. John It's not quite shortwave, but National Public Radio plays BBC programming from about midnight to 5 a.m. (at least my local station does) Bob k5qwg |
#9
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On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 15:55:48 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTUA3O7.html Note that not only are the Japanese smart enought to "develop" the technology, they are smart enough to ban its use in their own country. Owen -- |
#10
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Bob Miller wrote:
On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 15:55:48 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote: http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTUA3O7.html Little confusing -- the story doesn't explain how the signal gets to the house -- via power lines, cable, phone, wireless? Regardless, guess the house would be a buzz bomb of hash. bob k5qwg My impression of this story is that they are talking about a LAN system here not a ISP system. Therefore there should not be the broadband interferance of a BPL system. Of course I could be wrong. Dave WD9BDZ |
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