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![]() "user" wrote in message ... TAPR has been doing a good job in the last couple years with kits. The DSP-10 is a MAJOR undertaking, and they did great with it. The DSPx and KDSP10 are also very nice - I've been playing around with them the last few days. I've had a T238 for quite a while, and it's perfect. So, I'm MORE than happy with them as a kit vendor. When it comes to general packet radio, then, no, I don't look to them as a leader. Yes, TAPR has been good about the kits and technical articles for some time, but they are not really a packet radio organization as their name and web-site implies. The popular conception that TAPR is a packet radio organization is incorrect. TAPR has no interest in packet radio and does not support it. Many of the movers 'n shakers involved in TAPR despise packet radio in fact, and several are downright rude to hams who express an interest in it. The fact that TAPR marketed the TNC2 kit long ago has nothing to do with what they are now. I think we can safely allow Gene Story to be the TAPR poster-child with his response here, displaying the sort of attitude about packet radio that you can expect to find within TAPR. USPacket.Net is a genuine packet radio organization, dedicated to that aspect of the hobby. We do not feel that it is necessary to run down other aspects of amateur radio, in order to promote packet. Naturally, we at USPN would not want hams to mistakenly go to TAPR for packet information, only to be discouraged or derided by TAPR folk who share many opinions with our poster-boy Gene, here. It would be just as inappropriate for hams to go to USPN looking for kits or highly technical articles, as we do not offer any. What we do offer is support and usable, useful information for hams who are interested in amateur packet radio and most especially packet radio networking in the USA. Gene Story accused me of "hating" TAPR in his nastygram-post, but my feelings about TAPR do not run that strongly. As a technical organization that puts out kits, TAPR does a great job. What I do "hate" though, is to see hams being confused into thinking that TAPR is a packet radio organization when they are not. Personally, I applaud TAPR's reassessment of itself. It is accurate, and now only a name change is needed in order to reduce any remaining confusion as to what TAPR is, and what it does for the hobby. Charles Brabham, N5PVL Director: USPacket.Net http://www.uspacket.net |
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