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#1
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#3
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"Dr. Anton T. Squeegee" wrote in message
news:MPG.1cb86fee170dc028989700@localhost... In article , says... If you wish to file your comments with the ARRL regarding their bandwidth proposal, there is little time left to do so. Comments should be sent to: It is my understanding that the proposal, in it's current form, will allow WL2K stations control of nearly 40% of ALL of our current allocations in the snippety What would really have helped is links to sites that support your assertions. I've visited both the ARRL site at this link: http://www.arrl.org/news/features/2005/04/01/1/?nc=1 ...and winlink.org at this one... http://winlink.org/sysop/PMBO_FREQ.htm ...and I can't find anything which leads me to believe that there would be any sort of "packet-spewing robots" polluting the HF bands. In fact, I don't see anything other than a neat-looking project to establish a worldwide digital network that does not depend on the Internet. Except for the minor points that WinLink2K requires the internet to work, and uses the internet to "forward" it's traffic ... If you can give a clearer explanation of how you came to your conclusions, including some specific references to back them up, I will cheerfully make my voice heard at ARRL (I'm a lifetime member). Read up on WinLink2K, AirMail, etc. Google will help. -- ... Hank http://home.earthlink.net/~horedson http://home.earthlink.net/~w0rli |
#4
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"Jerry" writes:
this time, and that's WL2K. I don't intend to stand idly by and give up 40% of our most popular bands so some rich dudes in their motor homes, or on sailboats, can enjoy cheating the legitimate ISP's out of the fees that they charge for providing this service. Why stop there? Why not ban ham radio altogether, since (for example) ham voice communication cheats all those poor starving phone companies? Ponder this ... if these new wideband modes are soooo efficient, then why do they require 20 Khz of space? If you give packet radio 20 Khz, it too could be much faster. The speed limit on packet radio is now determined by the pitiful amount of bandwidth allocated to them. I'm all in favor of more bandwidth for spread spectrum packet, since it means less likelihood of interference (a voice or CW conversation could happen right on top of a 20 khz packet session without either interfering with the other). But I agree ham radio should not be a general purpose internet gateway. One reasonable solution could be to limit the maximum bit rate on HF to RTTY speed, 60 bits/sec or so, while still allowing spreading the 60 bits/sec across 20 khz of bandwidth. That's fast enough to send reasonable email and to have realtime text chat, would not require any tuning, and would be very effective at low transmit power. I've been interested in this approach for quite a while. Why does WL2K, a proprietary mode, with very high startup costs deserve all of this spectrum when packet radio has had to deal with the microscopic slices of bandwidth for all of these years??? I'm not familiar with WL2K but I don't like the idea of any type of proprietary mode being given special recognition in the band plan for any reason. |
#5
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![]() "Paul Rubin" wrote in message ... I'm not familiar with WL2K but I don't like the idea of any type of proprietary mode being given special recognition in the band plan for any reason. I know what you mean... When the ARRL starts to mandate which digital mode we must use, then rationality and the scientific method both go out the window. - By introducing "politics" ( if you want to call fascism 'politics' ) into the matter, the ARRL puts itself on the tabloid level. - They undermine themselves while doing the same to the rest of hobby. Corruption and stupidity at ARRL HQ... Sumner and Haynie are both in this, up to thier eyebrows. Charles Brabham, N5PVL Director: USPacket http://www.uspacket.org Admin: HamBlog.Com http://www.hamblog.com Weblog: http://www.hamblog.com/blog_n5pvl.php |
#6
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"Charles Brabham" writes:
I know what you mean... When the ARRL starts to mandate which digital mode we must use, then rationality and the scientific method both go out the window. I don't have a problem with the idea of mandating in favor of some digital modes at the expense of others. But the mandated modes should be non-proprietary. Spectrum is not the property of any particular vendor. |
#7
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"Paul Rubin" wrote in message
... "Charles Brabham" writes: I know what you mean... When the ARRL starts to mandate which digital mode we must use, then rationality and the scientific method both go out the window. I don't have a problem with the idea of mandating in favor of some digital modes at the expense of others. But the mandated modes should be non-proprietary. Spectrum is not the property of any particular vendor. I think you missed the point. WinLink2K depends on connectivity to the internet to work. For emergency communication it is totally useless. If the internet were available, one would simple USE it in the normal manner. If it is not available, WinLink2K is of no help to you at all. The whole concept is a scam. -- ... Hank http://home.earthlink.net/~horedson http://home.earthlink.net/~w0rli |
#8
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"Hank Oredson" writes:
I think you missed the point. WinLink2K depends on connectivity to the internet to work. For emergency communication it is totally useless. I'm not sure what WinLink2K is or what its relation to emergency communication is supposed to be. Is there a url about it? I've been interested for a while in a packet mode that uses the internet. An endpoint node wouldn't have to be on the net, but it would connect to a remote node that also had internet connectivity. So it would be fine for an emergency at the endpoint. If there was a catastrophe that took out the whole internet, then it wouldn't work. |
#9
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Gidday Paul
There has been for years The NOS TCP/IP over AX25 system that was setup around the late 1980's allows you to have gateways with various interfaces and tunnels. ie connected radios, modems, ethernet etc. There use to be quite a few wormholes where one use to pass packets without infringing amateur licenses. Basically you can either run TCP/IP over radio and internet links with any kind of routing/rerouting protocol you like. Each point where there are dual interfaces can also be an intelligent gateway/server. Apart from political and possibly legal reasons there is no technical problem with setting up a RF (amateur) link to replace/failover internet ones. Some care must obviously be exercised in bandwidth requirements. There is a lot more available on this that is beyond the small scope of my post. Linux boxes for example can do this job nowadays. I believe there are Windows equivalents but havent checked. Cheers Bob VK2YQA Paul Rubin wrote: I'm not sure what WinLink2K is or what its relation to emergency communication is supposed to be. Is there a url about it? I've been interested for a while in a packet mode that uses the internet. An endpoint node wouldn't have to be on the net, but it would connect to a remote node that also had internet connectivity. So it would be fine for an emergency at the endpoint. If there was a catastrophe that took out the whole internet, then it wouldn't work. |
#10
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Bob Bob writes:
The NOS TCP/IP over AX25 system that was setup around the late 1980's allows you to have gateways with various interfaces and tunnels. I'm familiar with NOS but I don't understand what it has to do with WinLink2K. What specifically is WinLink2K? Thanks. |