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John Siegel[_2_] September 10th 08 11:54 PM

QST Archive
 
Interesting announcement on the ARRL web site. They have put online an
archive of QSTs from 1915 to 2004. If you are a member you can search
for and download as a pdf any article without additional cost.

Just for fun I found the article from January 1956 that described my
first transmitter.
John


steve H September 11th 08 09:28 AM

QST Archive
 
John Siegel wrote:
Interesting announcement on the ARRL web site. They have put online an
archive of QSTs from 1915 to 2004. If you are a member you can search
for and download as a pdf any article without additional cost.

Just for fun I found the article from January 1956 that described my
first transmitter.
John

Do you have a link to it? I can't find it on the site.

Steve H

Rick September 11th 08 12:31 PM

QST Archive
 

Do you have a link to it? I can't find it on the site.



Steve - There is a link within a news story on the first page. Way down
near the bottom.

Rick



steve H September 11th 08 01:46 PM

QST Archive
 
Rick wrote:
Do you have a link to it? I can't find it on the site.



Steve - There is a link within a news story on the first page. Way down
near the bottom.

Rick


Many thanks. I build a lot of valve kit and QST was full of ideas in
the 50's and 60's. I buy back issues when I see them at hamfests but
you don't often see them in the UK.

steve h

Tim Shoppa September 11th 08 02:51 PM

QST Archive
 
On Sep 10, 6:54*pm, John Siegel wrote:
Interesting announcement on the ARRL web site. *They have put online an
archive of QSTs from 1915 to 2004. If you are a member you can search
for and download as a pdf any article without additional cost.

Just for fun I found the article from January 1956 that described my
first transmitter.


Cool, way cool!

I have roughly several hundred often moldy issues of QST's on my
shelves from the 40's through the 70's. Maybe the basement will smell
a little better now that I don't need them :-).

Having QEX online would be nice too... (hint, hint).

The sure way the ARRL can keep me as a member is to continue offering
this service to their members!

Tim N3QE

Allodoxaphobia September 11th 08 03:48 PM

QST Archive
 
On Wed, 10 Sep 2008 18:54:03 -0400, John Siegel wrote:
Interesting announcement on the ARRL web site. They have put online an
archive of QSTs from 1915 to 2004. If you are a member you can search
for and download as a pdf any article without additional cost.

Just for fun I found the article from January 1956 that described my
first transmitter.


Did anyone get "QST: Annual Index" to pull up the annual index for any
issue of QST? Returns nothing here _and_ it also highlights (selects)
the "QEX: Annual Index" and "Ham Radio: Annual Index" entries.

And, why no "QST: Table of Contents"!!

It's easy to trawl through various _columns_ in QST. But, unless you
have a pretty good idea what the title is, or who the author was,
there's no easy way to locate a feature article.

I would assume the _intent_ of putting all this up on the ARRL web site
is for ARRL Members to find material in old issues of QST. Why doesn't
the _implementation__ demonstrate this? At least give us the Annual
Index(es) and the TOCs.

Jonesy
--
Marvin L Jones | jonz | W3DHJ | linux
38.24N 104.55W | @ config.com | Jonesy | OS/2
* Killfiling google & XXXXbanter.com: jonz.net/ng.htm

Registered User September 11th 08 03:57 PM

QST Archive
 
On 11 Sep 2008 14:48:47 GMT, Allodoxaphobia
wrote:

On Wed, 10 Sep 2008 18:54:03 -0400, John Siegel wrote:
Interesting announcement on the ARRL web site. They have put online an
archive of QSTs from 1915 to 2004. If you are a member you can search
for and download as a pdf any article without additional cost.

Just for fun I found the article from January 1956 that described my
first transmitter.


Did anyone get "QST: Annual Index" to pull up the annual index for any
issue of QST? Returns nothing here _and_ it also highlights (selects)
the "QEX: Annual Index" and "Ham Radio: Annual Index" entries.

And, why no "QST: Table of Contents"!!

It's easy to trawl through various _columns_ in QST. But, unless you
have a pretty good idea what the title is, or who the author was,
there's no easy way to locate a feature article.

I would assume the _intent_ of putting all this up on the ARRL web site
is for ARRL Members to find material in old issues of QST. Why doesn't
the _implementation__ demonstrate this? At least give us the Annual
Index(es) and the TOCs.

I have about 80 years worth of the QST on CD collection. The tool I
use is the ARRL Periodicals Archive and Search
http://www.arrl.org/members-only/qqnsearch.html

73 de n4jvp

Tim Shoppa September 11th 08 08:12 PM

QST Archive
 
On Sep 11, 10:48*am, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
Did anyone get "QST: Annual Index" to pull up the annual index for any
issue of QST? *Returns nothing here _and_ it also highlights (selects)
the "QEX: Annual Index" and "Ham Radio: Annual Index" entries.

And, why no "QST: Table of Contents"!!

It's easy to trawl through various _columns_ in QST. *But, unless you
have a pretty good idea what the title is, or who the author was,
there's no easy way to locate a feature article.

I would assume the _intent_ of putting all this up on the ARRL web site
is for ARRL Members to find material in old issues of QST. *Why doesn't
the _implementation__ demonstrate this? *At least give us the Annual
Index(es) and the TOCs.


If you want an annual index, you type in the year, select the
magazine, set the month to any, and it lists all the articles for that
year.

About locating a feature article... depending on the nature of the
article there are keywords like "Construction Project",
"Modification", "Homebrew", "QRP", In between title search and
keyword search and author search, I've been able to find all the
articles that I've been looking for.

Could they improve the searching ability? Oh yeah, sure. I have a
freaking hardware-store orgasm every time I go to http://www.mcmaster.com/
just give it a try, I can start typing "Gear Puller" in the search box
and even before I finish the word puller, I have the catalog page in
front of me with pictures of all the relevant dimensions and types.
That's really good! I've used a lot of web-based search utilities and
I'd rank the ARRL QST online index/search engine as above average but
nowhere near the best.

Tim. N3QE


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