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  #131   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 01:01 AM
D. Stussy
 
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On Tue, 29 Jul 2003, Phil Kane wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jul 2003 D. Stussy wrote:
It does not mean that at all. It is another perfect example of FCC
regulation-writer shortsightedness, just like happened with the April 2000
changes.


Yeah. Monty DePont (and the rest of us who were craftsmen in rule
and affidavit and opinion writing) retired before that time and it's
so difficult to get "good help nowadays"......

I disagree. There is a [U.S.] requirement for these licenseholders
to meet the international requirement. Show me how they can do this
if the international requirement doesn't exist....


Sure it exists. It requires each Administration to determine if a
code test is necessary. It's not an "option" - each Administration
MUST determine if a code test is necessary or not. If the
Administration determines that it is, then any test that is ordered
complies with "international requirements".


If each government has a choice, then it's not an "international requirement."
A requirement means that there is no choice. The replacement S25.5 means that
each country has a choice to impose a NATIONAL REQUIREMENT on its
licenseholders (something they could have done anyway). How does that become
an international requirement when some member country to the agreement can opt
out?

S25.5 no longer REQUIRES anything. So how can one show that one has
met the requirement? That's impossible.


Having a choice (regardless of whom holds the choice) means that it
is an OPTION, and options aren't requirements. A requirement means
that there is no choice; no option. These are OPPOSITES.


The "international requirement" (inflexible rule) is that the
decision on code proficiency is now up to each Administration. This
isn't an "option" - this is a fixed rule = "requirement".


That statement focuses on "requirement," forgetting about "international."

"Meeting the international requirement" means meeting the rule set
by the FCC. The FCC cannot remove an operating privilege for an
entire class of licensee without a formal rule change unless it is a
temporary or emergency measure. There has not been any formal rule
change, so the situation remains as is.


Yes, there has. Treaties and international agreements supersede national laws.

Whether or not the IRS and the Tax Court works that way, that's how
the FCC works.

Dieter, you've been dealing with the IRS too much to think clearly
on this matter.....


Perhaps so, but you will find that interpretation of rules and regulations was
one of my strongest points when I worked for them. Thinking can be taxing! :-)
  #132   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 01:12 AM
D. Stussy
 
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On Tue, 29 Jul 2003, Alun Palmer wrote:
"Hugo" wrote in
:
Alun Palmer wrote in message
...
"Landshark" . wrote in
.com:
"D. Stussy" wrote in message
. org...\

Why don't you people pay attention that
your cross posting this troll fodder?

Landshark


Why are you blaming me for this? The original thread was crossposted. Blame
the person who started it all.

You should note that where I have noted an inapproprate group, I have killed
the cross-posting in my responses. I don't always note that, nor do I really
care. I'm not a mind reader of the originator of any thread, myself excluded.
  #133   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 03:15 AM
D. Stussy
 
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If I were a troll, then why aren't I hiding behind some name that isn't
resolvable to my true identity?

We've heard your drivel before. No matter how many times you repeat it will
not make it true.

On Wed, 30 Jul 2003, GM wrote:
On Wed, 30 Jul 2003 00:12:30 GMT, D. Stussy wrote:

Why are you blaming me for this? The original thread was crossposted. Blame
the person who started it all.


You are a troll. You post from ampr.org and easynews.com. You
aren't fooling anyone. We are taking this newsgroup back and nothing
you can do will stop that.

These are the handles you have used in the past couple of months
including but not limited to--

D. Stussy
R274C

Anon

Anon

Anus On Line
Aunt Bea

Barabbas

BARF

Big Al

Bob Badblood

Bubba

Bojangles

Claude

Dave Allan

David

DimmyDimwitt

Dobbie

Don Souter

Doug Martin

eaxxyz3

Ed Norton

Enrique Sanchez

Erasmo Hernandez

Firebottle

Floppy Disk

Fwankie

Goodfellows Rule

Goodie Two Shoes

Groan!

Guffaw!!!

Harley1200

Henry

Herb

Ho Ho

Howie

Itell On4zzabc

Itell OnU

I Zorg

Joe Partlan
King Creole

Lloyd

Lloyd

Lloyd/AB4NW
mmmm
Llyod
mmmm
L Rod Hubbard

Mark Mansfield

Miami Bob

Momma Moron

nookie

Nutcase Bobby

Onxyzzy

Pabst Smear

Pappy

Pat Carter

Patrick C

PCarter

Petey Arnett

Poo Bear

Q
ywhere
QRM Billy

QRP

Queenie

Randy Thomas

Rasheed

Ray Dude

Reactance

Richard W

Rob

Roger

Roger

Ron \"Stompin\" James

Sadiq Akhbar

Sammie Adams

Sammy Davis Sr.

Savant

Scammer

SLee

Stagger Lee

Stu Parker

The Moron List
_
Timmie TwoShoes

Trash Radio

Troll

Virgil

Voila!

What A HOOT!!!

Wrong Way
Zippo

zzabc




  #134   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 05:37 AM
Brian
 
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Floyd Davidson wrote in message ...

"Pal I can receive CW at 18 WPM and I even have a
fancy certificate from the US government to prove it."
Keith

Case dismissed, with prejudice.

He's just another idiot, and a code test didn't keep him or you out
of ham radio, and is unnecessary (indeed ineffective) as a filter.


Ah, yes. The "Code as a Filter" myth. I think that was #19 on the
Aaron Jones Morse Myths list.

bb

"Code gets thru when everything else will."
  #135   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 09:11 AM
Brian Kelly
 
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(Michael Black) wrote in message ...
Mike Coslo ) writes:
C wrote:
No I am not doing a memorizing of each dit and dah and converting
method. My problem is my brain does not react fast enough to decide what
each character is before the next one is sent. I just get further
behind. I practice at least 20 to 30 minutes usually twice a day if not
more. I use computer programs and ARRL training CDs.

I will check "The Art and Skill of Radiotelegraphy". Thanks for the
encouragement.



Ahh, that training CD! I used it, and failed miserably at it. Turns out
I memorized the darn thing. You might try a program that sends out
random groups or even makes up QSO's.

- Mike KB3EIA -

With most people having computers, learning CW should be so much easier
nowadays. Not like when I was ten, and bought a telegraph set so I
could learn Morse Code, not realizing that sending is not he same thing
as receiving.

One of the things I've wondered about is whether one could get used
to the sounds of the letters subconciously via a program that
sends the morse letter everytime you press a key on your keyboard.
You wouldn't really being paying attention, but it would be a positive
reinforcement of what sounds go with what letters. I'm not sure
it would be a completely painless method, but it would either help
get someone used to the sounds, or reinforce the learning already done.


That would drive me batty!

But I'm not sure anyone has cooked up such a program.

At the very least, with people spending so much time at their
computers, I'd suggest running a CW practice program, sending
random letters, while you do something else at your computer.
Set the volume relatively low, and don't even bother trying to
copy it; just use it to get used to the sounds.

I suspect some of the problem some people have is that they are
trying way too hard. They see the code as an obstacle, and are
fighting it all the way. "Now I'm going to do my hour of code
practice".


That's a bad idea, an hour straight is 'way too long for learning
purposes.

In the old days, that would mean going to a code
practice course, or buying one of those records (I had one to
start, and I think it did help), or listening to a receiver
where the code might not be optimal or under the best conditions.


When I studied for my earliest tests there were no consumer-level
recording methods let alone computers. My only options for practicing
Morse were having somebody hand-send it or copying it off the air.
Which, as a practical matter, meant copying it with a rcvr or forget
it. I'm still a very strong supporter of learning Morse via the W1AW
code practice sessions. Today they transmit computer-generated code
and back then I believe they used tape-generated code so it has always
been quite precise. I'll concede that I'm only around 150 miles from
the station so they boom here on 80M and QRM wasn't/isn't a problem.
Might be more difficult from the west coasts but I don't know.

I still recommend W1AW over any of the "canned" aids. Two downsides of
course are that W1AW does not send Farnsworth and one needs a
half-decent HF rcvr.

http://www.arrl.org/w1aw.html#w1awsked


You sit there with your pen and paper, and struggle to get it
all right. But moving it into the background makes it less important,
and perhaps by simply getting used to the sounds before struggling
to get it all, it might all come easier.


w3rv






Michael VE2BVW



  #137   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 03:21 PM
see sea oh ecks at you aitch see dot comm
 
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You know, perhaps Technician class amateurs DO have HF privileges due to
the reference to the old International requirement. However, where in the
Schedule are the specific frequency bands allocated.

I would need to rereat Pt97, but, my guess is that they either have NO
specific allocated frequency bands, or, they would be the same as the Novice
class licence.

--
Chris Cox, N0UK/G4JEC NIC Handle: CC345
UnitedHealthGroup, Inc., MN10-W116, UNIX Services & Consulting
6300 Olson Memorial Highway, Golden Valley, MN 55427
email: (work) (home)
  #138   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 10:23 PM
N2EY
 
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"Dan/W4NTI" wrote in message ...
"Dee D. Flint" wrote in message
y.com...

"C" wrote in message
...

No I am not doing a memorizing of each dit and dah and converting
method. My problem is my brain does not react fast enough to decide what
each character is before the next one is sent.


At 5 wpm with Farnsworth spacing, you have around 1.5-2 seconds
between characters. That should be plenty. Are you using Farnsworth
spacing?

Try this experiment: Have someone read a random sequence of standard
phonetics ("Hotel, Sierra, Alfa, Yankee..." at a rate of about one
word every two seconds while you write down the first letter of each
word. If you can do that, it's a good bet you can learn to copy 5 wpm
code.

Are you block printing or writing cursive? I found block printing
avoided a lot of problems because each letter stands alone.

I just get further
behind. I practice at least 20 to 30 minutes usually twice a day if not
more. I use computer programs and ARRL training CDs.

I will check "The Art and Skill of Radiotelegraphy". Thanks for the
encouragement.


Try this:

Set the computer to send just two unrelated characters - say, R and Z.
Practice copying those two until you get 95% or better copy. Then add
just one more letter and practice until you can get 95% or better with
those three. The trick is to not add any new ones until you know the
old ones almost perfectly.

None of us could react fast enough at first. You are not alone. When you
are copying and miss a letter, just skip it and catch the next one. If
you
let your mind focus on what you missed, you will then miss several others
that come after. DON'T TRY TO GET THE MISSED LETTER AT THAT TIME. Just
write an underscore and go on so that you don't miss following letters.
This takes a little practice by the way as we all want to be perfect so we
sit there and try to figure it out while falling further behind. If you

get
a lot of blanks at first, that's OK. Just keep working on it.


Good advice. But don;t be afraid to backtrack as above, to find what
letters are giving you trouble.

When you take the test, you are allowed time to go back over your paper

and
fill in what you think the missing material might be. Here is an example
(using an underscore for characters that you miss on the copy).

What you originally copied: NAM_ IS JO_N.
Now if you look back over your copy, fill in what you believe the missing
letters should be. In this case, the text sent was most likely: NAME IS
JOHN.
Then on the test questions, you will probably be asked the name and there
you have it right there on your paper.


When I took my extra code test (20wpm), I had a lot of underscores on my
paper but despite that I was able to successfully answer the country
question (it was Switzerland) even though I only had about half the

letters
copied on my sheet.


That works fine unless the text sent was "NAME IS JOAN"

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


Yeah its tough now Dee. When I took mine is was solid copy at 20 wpm for
one solid minute out of five. Oh well.

Me too. And no time was allowed for going back - when the code
stopped, they took the paper away. Plus, if the examiner could not
read your writing, you flunked. Also you had to send 20 per to the
examiner's satisfaction.

But all that has been gone for over 20 years now. Ancient history. Yet
many hams licensed since those days could easily meet that standard.

Note that today's test can be passed by answering the questions OR
finding one minute (25 characters) of solid copy.

73 es GL de Jim, N2EY
  #139   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 10:29 PM
Dan/W4NTI
 
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wrote in message
...
"Dan/W4NTI" wrote:

I like that..sounds plausable. Oh....when I was learning it and I was
riding in the car with mom I would sound out the Morse on all the
roadsigns I could see. Drove mom nuts, but it helped. Not dot
dash.....di dah.

Dan/W4NTI

Do you want to impress me Dan? Sit shotgun in my Belvedere and
tap out some portable CW in a quarter mile launch!

You cross posting fart.

--
GO# 40


I didn't initiate this thread. Track it down moron.

Dan/W4NTI


  #140   Report Post  
Old July 30th 03, 10:45 PM
Dan/W4NTI
 
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wrote in message
...
"Dan/W4NTI" wrote:

I didn't initiate this thread. Track it down moron.

Dan/W4NTI

Just keep hitting send, you ****ing asshole.

--
GO# 40


OK. Just for you I will keep doing it. Over and Over again. Everytime I
damn well want.

Dan/W4NTI


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