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"William H. O'Hara, III" wrote in message
.61... Kim, I don't think that you mentioned the only practical use for CW, today. In an emergency operation one can use CW almost as a cipher. If Newsreporters, whom possess "investigative skills", were to attempt their intercepts by a scanner, then they would simply have no comprehension. With all due respect, William (or is it Bill), seems that deliberately coding/encrypting on the amateur bands is contrary to the R&R, if ya know what I mean. And, it also seems to me that any reporter with really good investigative skills would be well aware of your scenario, above. However, CW is definitely a practical skill, and a needed one, in EmCom. I've never, ever disputed that. And, I encouraged openings and training for CW whenever I have been in a position of leadership in the EmCom world. I've also encouraged and trained with openings to HF, etc. The only thing we never were able to accommodate is SSTV and ATV. We had every other check-in. We would call from FM (2M *AND* 70cm) to the net participants we knew had HF points. They would call to all net participants on all bands we could cover at any particular training net; then those individuals would relay to CW for any CW net participants. Then it would all be relayed back into the 2M/70cm nets. What would have happened "in an actual emergency" (GRIN), was all FM operations would have then become tactical with local Emergency Services; and we--as amateur radio operators--would "set up" the rest of the operations, as needed, for net operations. The goal was to have all H&W set up and operating via relay (on different freqs than the local operation freqs) from FM to HF/CW capability. We also had PSK ops in that arena. For "relief" portions of the net (those ops that would be looking for food and refreshment, extra batteries, more equipment, more cars, chainsaws...what-have-you) was relayed from FM to FM capable hams that also had FRS/GMRS, etc. They would relay those ops needs out to non-hams (we called it the auxilliary service) and that included, by the way, anyone who needed babysitters, animals fed, home needs. It was our desire to have as much of the community/families involved as we could--regardless of their amateur radio license status. At a EMA ARES training session, the one of the ARES officials told us that CW should be considered for passing of vital information solely to keep the opsec tight. I understand the concept, and I know that in an emergency the R&R may very well go out the window--as you know, all that is debatable. BUT, that given, there are ways to handle sensitive information by using other means than CW; although CW is a fine choice also! Opsec happens to mean Operation Security. I guess that everyone loves Delta Force and the terms endeared by SFOD-1D. We were "aware" of any lingo that might be used by our served agencies (that was also done and learned by actually visiting the served agencies and seeing/learning how they operate). However, on the support ops part of the net--we didn't get into using all that fancy stuff, we pretty much used plain language. At the Boston Marathon I was given a code key for authentication purposes. Bill KB1IUB Uh, you mean strictly to "please" some public service official, or because you actually used it? Honest question. Kim W5TIT --- Posted via news://freenews.netfront.net Complaints to |