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![]() KB6NU's Ham Radio Blog /////////////////////////////////////////// Do we need more Volunteer Examiner Coordinators? Posted: 07 Jan 2021 09:11 AM PST http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu...m_medium=email Yesterday, one of the hams I follow on Twitter posted a link to FCC Public Notice DA-21-9, titled, WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS BUREAU SEEKS INPUT ON EXPANDING THE NUMBER OF AMATEUR OPERATOR LICENSE VOLUNTEER EXAMINER COORDINATORS (all caps theirs). The first paragraph concludes, The Bureau seeks to determine whether the existing 14 VECs provide adequate support to volunteer examiners or whether additional VECs are needed. After a couple of paragraphs explaining what the Amateur Radio Service is, and the current way in which VECs administer amateur radio license exams, it asks the following questions: Are the existing 14 VECs sufficient to coordinate the efforts of volunteer examiners in preparing and administering examinations for amateur radio operator licenses, or are additional VECs needed to support the amateur community? What needs are currently being met, and which needs, if any, are currently unmet? If the Commission were to allow additional VECs, how many additional VECs are needed to satisfy the existing amateur service operator license examination needs? Given VECs use a collaborative process to create the question pool and operating protocols for how volunteer examiners administer exams, would additional VECs enhance or hinder this collaborative process? Finally, we seek comment on how increasing the number of VECs will address the unmet needs, if any, of the amateur community, as well as on what obstacles or complications could be created by increasing the number of VECs? I was honestly quite surprised by all this. I hadnt heard anything at all about a desire to add more VECs. Anyone know whos behind this? It seems to me, that even during this pandemic, folks are able to get their licenses easily enough. I think what the FCC might want to do is to determine how active the current VECs are and set some minimum amount of activity as a requirement for keeping VEC certification. I recently polled some of the VECs for another blog post. Several did not respond at all, while one simply replied that their VEC was no longer really active. As far as whether or not more VECs wouldÂ* enhance or hinder the question pool process, I dont think thats the right question. The NCVEC is in charge of the question pools, and the process is only as collaborative as the Question Pool Committee allows it to be. I dont think that there being more VECs will make one whit of difference to the question pool process. Anyway, Id love to hear what you all think about this, especially if youve been involved as a VE at all. The post Do we need more Volunteer Examiner Coordinators? appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog. /////////////////////////////////////////// Who are the top ten figures in the history of amateur radio? Posted: 06 Jan 2021 12:14 PM PST http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu...m_medium=email Should we consider Samuel Morse to be one of the top ten figures in amateur radio? Im working with an author who is working on amateur radio reference book. It will have a glossary of terms, a list of Q-signals, and some other good stuff. Yesterday, he sent me a link to the Wikipedia page for Samuel Morse, the inventor of the Morse Code. He asked, Would this be useful? Can we use it? Were having enough trouble getting this book done without adding material to it, so I jokingly replied, Maybe this is the start of your next book, something like Profiles in Amateur Radio, short biographies of the 10 most important figures in the history of amateur radio. I did mean it as a joke, but the more I think about it, the more I like this idea. Im thinking maybe short biographies of perhaps the ten most influential people in the history of amateur radio. The question, then, is who are these ten people? Heres a list that Ive come up with off the top of my head: Samuel Morse, inventor of Morse Code Guglielmo Marconi, the inventor of radio Lee de Forest, inventor of the vaccum tube Hiram Percy Maxim, the first president of the ARRL Hugo Gernsback, one of the first publishers of radio magazines and the founder of the Wireless Association of America Arthur A. Collins founder of Collins Radio William Halligan, founder of the Hallicrafters Company Joseph Taylor, Nobel laureate and inventor of many weak-signal digital modes Howard Anthony, the man who got Heathkit into the electronics business Wayne Green, W2NSD, editor of CQ and editor/publisher of 73 and various computer magazines Id love to get your input on this. Please email me with your recommendations, or comment below. The post Who are the top ten figures in the history of amateur radio? appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog. |
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