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Brian Kelly July 15th 03 08:19 PM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..


I beleive in free choice. If someone wants to study a broad programme they
can, but I don't beleive in forcing people to study things they don't want
to, at least not beyond the age of 16, and even then only to avoid
illiteracy and innumeracy.

My own interests are not atall narrow, but they are eclectic. They include
poetry, archaeology and languages, for example. If, however, a poetry
class were to be compulsory in an EE curriculum, I feel strongly that it
would be wrong. You can't force people to become well-rounded. Force
feeding is a poor sort of education.

I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.


I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional
education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K.
technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita
or on any other basis.

w3rv

Carl R. Stevenson July 15th 03 09:07 PM


"Brian Kelly" wrote in message
om...
"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message

...
"Brian Kelly" wrote in message


Carl check me here but wasn't it you who advocated the abandonment of
all mode setasides in order to be able to run wall-to-wall spread
spectrum on 20M?


No ... I have pointed out that most countries of the world do not have
"by-mode" sub-band allocations in their amateur regulations and it

doesn't
seem to cause any real problem.


Not the point and most of us were well aware of the differences in
band/mode edges.

I also (as did Gary Coffman, independently)


'nother sweetheart . . .


I don't know about "sweetheart" ... but Gary is a good ham
and quite technically astute from my observation.
I wish he was still around here ...

postulate a strawman design
(but something feasible, never the less) for a system that, in the 150

kHz
of CW/data sub-band on 20m could support a very large number of
20 wpm Morse-equivalent QSOs with virtually no interference.
That was immediately rejected by Morse fanatics,


What's this frigging "Morse fanatic" nonsense? I'm certainly no "Morse
fanatic", I probably spend as much time on an annualized basis with a
mic in my mouth as I do running CW. I use Morse and I support the use
of and testing for Morse.

This particular non-fanatic immediately spotted the fallacies and
impossibilities in your posts on the topic as they relate to any mode
which occupies an entire ham band and is overlaid/underlaid on narrow
modes particularly under weak signal condx. This is not fanaticism.
This is the same reaction some hugely overwheming majority of the
active hams today would reject on smell or sight. Including the
technically savvy amongst us. More like *particularly* the technically
savvy.


The "strawman designs" that Gary and I postulated did NOT contemplate
the use of SS across the whole band as an "underlay." The modulation was
completely different, with a fair amount of coding.

who said something
like:
"We don't want no stinking keyboard mode." (My response was to
make Morse I/O a user interface option. Still rejected.)
"The fun of it is digging the weak ones out of the noise." (My response
was, "You want channel impairments? No problem. I can program
all sorts of simulated channel impairments into the system to make

copying
as hard as you want ... without having to trash the underlying, reliable
communications system." Still rejected.)


Exactly and none of it flew then and it never will.


Why? ... if it looks to the user EXACTLY as "traditional Morse" one would
not be able to tell the difference (and therefore should have no logical,
rational
reason for rejecting it). The idea is that the "challenge" that some relish
can be
provided, as I said, without "trashing" the underlying, reliable
communications
system.

You don't have to worry yourself about writing any simulators,
sophisticated contest simulator programs have been around for years,
all the predicatble parameters can be adjusted to suit the intensity
of the pileups, QSB, QRN, code speeds, whacky callsigns, helluva lotta
fun to play with. They also serve a very valuable role as contest
logger and computer station control traininmg wheels. In the end
they're neat electronic ping-pong games but IT AIN'T FRIGGING RADIO.
Nobody is gonna go play electronic ping-pong so that you and Coffman
can play band edge to band edge.


I *was* talking about RADIO ... a system that would communicate over
distances via radio ... just more reliably ... and THEN adding the
impariments
("challenge") at the receiving end to satisfy those who "like to dig the
weak
ones out of the noise/QRM."

transmit data reliably over transcontinental distances ... with power
outputs on the order of 10 mW ... as an "underlay" to existing services

that don't even notice that they are there.

Times how many stations?


Quite a few, but to be honest I don't know the exact number (and if I
did, I couldn't say).

QRPP PSK31 has done the same tricks. But PSK doesn't clobber the whole
band, doesn't require the development of new equipment, didn't require
a radical R&O to get on the air and can be done for the cost of some
audio cables at most ham stations.

I notice that TAPR has given up trying to get spread spectrum on the
air. Nobody in TAPR cares enough about SS to work thru the bugs.
There's a loud statement about ham SS.


IMHO, TAPR's SS effort was doomed from the start by being overly
complex.

Carl - wk3c


Brian July 15th 03 10:45 PM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..

Well, he's clearly Indian, and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me if
we share some views in common and don't buy into the received wisdom of
the US of A.


Alun, what a curious statement. What does being Indian and British,
and not American, that allows you to have some views in common?

Brian

Dee D. Flint July 15th 03 11:39 PM


"Alun Palmer" wrote in message
...
(Len Over 21) wrote in
:

In article , Alun Palmer
writes:

I'm against that too. BTW, I got my EE degree in England, and you don't
have to go through any of that wholly irrelevant stuff. No English, no
social studies of any kind, no chemistry (which I understand is oftem
required over here).


Alun, California state undergraduate requirements in the 1960s had
two semesters of American History. Considering our history, like

from
the 1776 breakaway, that isn't comparable to what you had to do in
the UK. :-) :-) :-)

I don't know why there is such a fervor of the PCTAs to equate an
academic degree with an amateur radio license class that requires
a demonstrated skill at morsemanship. Maybe the PCTA have a need
to stay with the King Kode rulers of the ARS kingdom? :-)

LHA


I don't beleive either academic degrees or ham licences should require
unnecessary stuff, that's all.


Since there is no way to predict where your future interests may lie, it's
impossible to say unequivocally what is unnecessary stuff.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


Steve Robeson, K4CAP July 16th 03 12:06 AM

(Brian) wrote in message om...
"Phil Kane" wrote in message t.net...


(c) Every FCC-watcher in the last 15 years recognizes that in every
"privitization" move by the FCC - or else they should be in some
other line of work.


Ah, I see. "Everybody knows..."


"(c) Every FCC-watcher..." (SNIP)

Was there a problem with the parameters he set, Brain? I
understood them perfectly.

Steve, K4YZ

Brian July 16th 03 12:35 AM

(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
(Brian) wrote in message . com...
(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
(Brian) wrote in message . com...
(N2EY) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(Brian) writes:

(N2EY) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(Brian) writes:

Still no citation from Arnie concerning his claim that NCI is on
record for less technical exams.

Still no answer from you concerning these questions about your alleged /T5
operation:

What callsign was used?
What rigs and antennas were used?
Who did the equipment belong to?
What amateur bands and modes were used?
What countries and continents were worked?
How were the QSLs delivered?

Why is it alleged?

Because you haven't provided any information about or confirmation of your
alleged operation.

Then how do you know about it?

You have claimed here and elsewhere to have operated /T5 about a
decade ago. But you provided no details, even when directly asked. So
any reasonable person has cause to be skeptical.


Lemme think this through.

After you and several minions


I don't have any "minions".


Perhaps they were bunions.

have performed an exhaustive search
concerning my operation in Somalia, and having turned up nothing, you
want me to corroborate my own operation so that you'll be less
skeptical?


Nope.

I and some others have asked some basic, simple, straightforward
questions about your alleged /T5 operations.


After having exhausted all other venues.

You have repeatedly
avoided answering any of them.


Yes, that is correct. But if you do your research you'll find I have
stated much of what you asked in previous posts to rrap. Get to work.

Ha! That's a good one.


Go ahead and believe what you want to believe. You will anyway
regardless of anything I could say.

Why don't you just answer the questions?


How is it that you didn't believe me then, but you're willing to
believe me now? I just don't get it.

To be honest, I don't think there is any answer that will satisfy you.

Brian

Brian Kelly July 16th 03 12:53 AM

(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
(Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com...
"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...



Carl check me here but wasn't it you who advocated the abandonment of
all mode setasides in order to be able to run wall-to-wall spread
spectrum on 20M?


Read that sentence carefully:

"I *personally* would hate to see the digital/CW sub-bands overrun by
SSB."

Spread spectrum isn't SSB.


Yeah, I saw it and passed. There's just so much a body has time to
"handle". SS is OK on the HF ham bands but BPL is bad. Beats me.


The rallying cry I recall hearing was "no setasides for legacy
modes"...


What the hell is the definition of a "legacy mode" anyway?

The discussion you recall, Brian, was an exchange between Carl and
either KE3Z or W1RFI (halfheimer moment has me mixing them up, but I
think it was Jon) here some years back. IIRC, Carl thought that HF
DSSS (direct-sequence spread spectrum) could be overlaid atop, say, 15
meters. His opponent pointed out that even a QRP station with a simple
antenna would lay down an increased noise level to "narrow-band" users
for miles around if that were allowed.


Ayup.

Some basics:

Suppose Amateur A operates a 100 watt 15 meter SSB rig into a decent
vertical.


As an aside there is no such thing as a "decent" vertical if used
above 40M.

Let's say he is S9+20 dB or louder over, say, a 5 mile
radius, and his signal is 2.5 kHz wide. That is, a 2.5 kHz wide rx
picks up almost all of the signal Amateur A transmits. (Does anybody
see anything amiss with the above numbers?)


Nope.

Now suppose Amateur A switches to DSSS and spreads that same 100 watts
over 250 kHz of the band. For mathematical simplicity, let's assume
the power is equally distributed over the 250 kHz, though in reality
it will drop off towards the edges and be highest in the center. A 2.5
kHz receiver will now intercept only 1% of that DSSS signal, because
it is 100 times wider than the rx passband. So the DSSS signal sounds
like noise, but its level is 20 db lower - S9. If Amateur A drops his
power to 1 watt, the noise will drop 20 dB more - to about S6.


OR, in the cw setasides where 4-500 Hz filters are commonly used the
received energy from SS signals would be reduced by 80% vs. the case
with the 2.5 Khz ssb filter. Still ridiculous.

So we have an S6 noise level within the above area over 250 kHz of the
band from ONE station running 1 watt.


Who sez they would only run one watt and how many of 'em on the air
simultaneously would it take to (fill in the blank).

Spread the signal over the
entire band instead of 250 kHzand the noise level drops less than 3
dB. How much weak-signal DX you gonna work with an S5 noise level over
the entire band?


Zilch. I routinely work stations which don't even flick my
oversensitive zero-inertia S-meter into the first LED segment.
Whatzzat if you believe S-meters, an SŲ?? 25-30 dB weaker than the SS
signal?

Note also that if propagation is decent, it's not unusual to hear
S9+20 dB signals from 100-watt-and-simple-antenna stations hundreds or
thousands of miles away. What if each one of those signals dumped its
own S5+ noise level on you, even though they were running 1W out?


The band would be rendered useless for the hordes by anybody running
SS and that's why it ain't never gonna happen in our lifetimes.


73 de Jim, N2EY


w3rv

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 03:51 AM

Mike Coslo wrote in :

Alun Palmer wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote in some snippage


Alun Palmer wrote:

I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.

You must be related to our friend Vipul! At least you think
alike.

- Mike KB3EIA -



Well, he's clearly Indian, and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me
if we share some views in common and don't buy into the received
wisdom of the US of A.


Come on, Alun. Let's not go all nationalistic on us here.


Can you predict what you will make use of in your career? Right
now, I
am making full use of my art classes, my technical classes, my
careerlong professional development, and all the other classes I took,
even though some seemed irrelevant at the time.


- Mike KB3EIA -



I have no beef against your EE degrees. Given that they are a whole year
longer than ours I'm sure you can afford to cover irrelevant stuff without
missing anything important. I just feel sorry for the poor students who
have to sit through it, that's all!

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 03:52 AM

Mike Coslo wrote in :

Alun Palmer wrote:


I don't beleive either academic degrees or ham licences should require
unnecessary stuff, that's all.


Tell me what shouldn't be taught.

- Mike KB3EIA -



I'm sure you can work it out

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 03:54 AM

ospam (Larry Roll K3LT) wrote in
:

In article , Alun Palmer
writes:

I beleive in free choice. If someone wants to study a broad programme
they can, but I don't beleive in forcing people to study things they
don't want to, at least not beyond the age of 16, and even then only to
avoid illiteracy and innumeracy.


Alun:

Perhaps there would be fewer illiterate, innumerate, and indigent
people in this world if they WERE pushed to learn more and gain useful
skills.

My own interests are not atall narrow, but they are eclectic. They
include poetry, archaeology and languages, for example. If, however, a
poetry class were to be compulsory in an EE curriculum, I feel strongly
that it would be wrong. You can't force people to become well-rounded.
Force feeding is a poor sort of education.


So, you don't believe that a well-rounded background in the Arts and
Humanities creates people who are better able to think for themselves?
This attitude probably explains why Great Britain is welfare state
about to be crushed under the weight of it's enormous, dependant
underclass.

I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.


Well, if you want to ensure that there is an endless supply of crude,
intellectually impotent people in the world, I can understand why you
may think that way. You should run for a seat as a Labour Party MP.
You seem to have the right qualifications.

73 de Larry, K3LT
Ex: G0LYW



I'll leave that to people who actually beleive in socialism.

73 de Alun, N3KIP, Ex-G8VUK, G0VUK

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 03:56 AM

(Brian Kelly) wrote in
om:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..


I beleive in free choice. If someone wants to study a broad programme
they can, but I don't beleive in forcing people to study things they
don't want to, at least not beyond the age of 16, and even then only
to avoid illiteracy and innumeracy.

My own interests are not atall narrow, but they are eclectic. They
include poetry, archaeology and languages, for example. If, however, a
poetry class were to be compulsory in an EE curriculum, I feel
strongly that it would be wrong. You can't force people to become
well-rounded. Force feeding is a poor sort of education.

I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.


I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional
education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K.
technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita
or on any other basis.

w3rv


Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again?

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 04:04 AM

(Brian) wrote in
om:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..

Well, he's clearly Indian, and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me
if we share some views in common and don't buy into the received
wisdom of the US of A.


Alun, what a curious statement. What does being Indian and British,
and not American, that allows you to have some views in common?

Brian


Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it, but
it does give us a certain common heritage.

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 04:06 AM

"Dee D. Flint" wrote in
y.com:


"Alun Palmer" wrote in message
...
(Len Over 21) wrote in
:

In article , Alun Palmer
writes:

I'm against that too. BTW, I got my EE degree in England, and you
don't have to go through any of that wholly irrelevant stuff. No
English, no social studies of any kind, no chemistry (which I
understand is oftem required over here).

Alun, California state undergraduate requirements in the 1960s
had two semesters of American History. Considering our history,
like from the 1776 breakaway, that isn't comparable to what you
had to do in the UK. :-) :-) :-)

I don't know why there is such a fervor of the PCTAs to equate an
academic degree with an amateur radio license class that requires
a demonstrated skill at morsemanship. Maybe the PCTA have a need
to stay with the King Kode rulers of the ARS kingdom? :-)

LHA


I don't beleive either academic degrees or ham licences should require
unnecessary stuff, that's all.


Since there is no way to predict where your future interests may lie,
it's impossible to say unequivocally what is unnecessary stuff.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE



Well, here's an idea. Should you find later that you need to learn about
something, have you ever heard of books? I find them very useful.

Brian July 16th 03 01:23 PM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
(Brian) wrote in
om:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..

Well, he's clearly Indian, and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me
if we share some views in common and don't buy into the received
wisdom of the US of A.


Alun, what a curious statement. What does being Indian and British,
and not American, that allows you to have some views in common?

Brian


Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it, but
it does give us a certain common heritage.


Who do you think may have rules America prior to our independance?

Brian Kelly July 16th 03 03:01 PM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
(Brian Kelly) wrote in
om:


I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.


I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional
education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K.
technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita
or on any other basis.

w3rv


Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again?


I screwed that one to the wall good din I? It was late. The Scotch was
lousy.

Don't duck the bullet Alun, I don't have to try again, you bloody well
know what I mean.

God help science, engineering and western civilization the day
American universities don't have license to pound at least some
modicum of literacy into the thick skulls of the geeklets.

w3rv

Alun Palmer July 16th 03 03:11 PM

(Brian) wrote in
om:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..
(Brian) wrote in
om:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..

Well, he's clearly Indian, and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise
me if we share some views in common and don't buy into the received
wisdom of the US of A.

Alun, what a curious statement. What does being Indian and British,
and not American, that allows you to have some views in common?

Brian


Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it,
but it does give us a certain common heritage.


Who do you think may have rules America prior to our independance?


This is true too.

Dave Heil July 16th 03 08:20 PM

Alun Palmer wrote:

Mike Coslo wrote in
:


You must be related to our friend Vipul! At least you think alike.

- Mike KB3EIA -



Well, he's clearly Indian,


That isn't clear at all.

and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me if
we share some views in common and don't buy into the received wisdom of the US of A.


That wouldn't surprise me either but both of you seem to prefer feeding
at the American trough.

Dave K8MN

Brian Kelly July 16th 03 09:51 PM

"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...
"Brian Kelly" wrote in message
The "strawman designs" that Gary and I postulated did NOT contemplate
the use of SS across the whole band as an "underlay." The modulation was
completely different, with a fair amount of coding.


That's not my recollection at all but for absolute certain any type of
HF SS would require some bandwidth far in excess of the bandwidths
currently permissable under the regs or acceptable by the users of the
so-called legacy modes on HF. The inherent bandwidth characteristic of
SS has made it destructively non-compatible with the modes currently
in use in HF ham bands. Ain't gonna happen in our lifetimes, ham HF SS
is a non-sequiter.


all sorts of simulated channel impairments into the system to make

copying
as hard as you want ... without having to trash the underlying, reliable
communications system." Still rejected.)


Exactly and none of it flew then and it never will.


Why? ... if it looks to the user EXACTLY as "traditional Morse" one would
not be able to tell the difference (and therefore should have no logical,
rational
reason for rejecting it).


Your term IF is the Achilles heel of your whole argument. We've been
down this road, i.e., the problem with logical/rational being the
primanry drivers in ham radio. Ham radio is not a commercial service
where logic is the driver. The standard issue ham is into ham radio
for it's recreational value and the rest flows from there.


they're neat electronic ping-pong games but IT AIN'T FRIGGING RADIO.
Nobody is gonna go play electronic ping-pong so that you and Coffman
can play band edge to band edge.


I *was* talking about RADIO ... a system that would communicate over
distances via radio ... just more reliably ... and THEN adding the
impariments
("challenge") at the receiving end to satisfy those who "like to dig the
weak
ones out of the noise/QRM."


Then you better find a like-minded programmer who has extensive
real-world actual experience with weak-signal DXing and contesting CW
and otherwise to write the code. You sure as hell are not qualified to
do that.

You're snapping around the edges of needing AI to pull off any such
code. We all know how easy that is (?!). IBM has a well-funded crew of
their comp sci & math geniuses and a mainfarme dedicated to
periodically trying to beat one human chess player's brain. And chess
is just a two-dimensional board game with rigid rules of play which
allows large chunks of time to make the decisions on each move. HF CW
contesting in particular has more dimensions than I can even start to
count and decsions are routinely made several times a second. Just for
openers. How ya gonna do it Carl? A bit of C++ and VB in a ham shack
PC? Yeah, right. Not even a decent pipe dream.

transmit data reliably over transcontinental distances ... with power
outputs on the order of 10 mW ... as an "underlay" to existing services

that don't even notice that they are there.

Times how many stations?


Quite a few, but to be honest I don't know the exact number (and if I
did, I couldn't say).


Bullet = Ducked

I notice that TAPR has given up trying to get spread spectrum on the
air. Nobody in TAPR cares enough about SS to work thru the bugs.
There's a loud statement about ham SS.


IMHO, TAPR's SS effort was doomed from the start by being overly
complex.


You're pretty good at that yourself.

Carl - wk3c


w3rv

Brian July 16th 03 11:28 PM

(Steve Robeson, K4CAP) wrote in message . com...
(Brian) wrote in message om...
"Phil Kane" wrote in message t.net...


(c) Every FCC-watcher in the last 15 years recognizes that in every
"privitization" move by the FCC - or else they should be in some
other line of work.


Ah, I see. "Everybody knows..."


"(c) Every FCC-watcher..." (SNIP)

Was there a problem with the parameters he set, Brain? I
understood them perfectly.

Steve, K4YZ


Steve, what can I say? You are an exceptional individual. Some would
say extraordinary, unique, even special.

Len Over 21 July 17th 03 01:44 AM

In article , Alun Palmer
writes:

(Brian Kelly) wrote in
. com:

Alun Palmer wrote in message
. ..

I beleive in free choice. If someone wants to study a broad programme
they can, but I don't beleive in forcing people to study things they
don't want to, at least not beyond the age of 16, and even then only
to avoid illiteracy and innumeracy.

My own interests are not atall narrow, but they are eclectic. They
include poetry, archaeology and languages, for example. If, however, a
poetry class were to be compulsory in an EE curriculum, I feel
strongly that it would be wrong. You can't force people to become
well-rounded. Force feeding is a poor sort of education.

I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted
classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it
disqualifies the college.


I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional
education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K.
technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita
or on any other basis.

w3rv


Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again?


Ahem, I think he already provided a graphic example... :-)

LHA

Len Over 21 July 17th 03 01:44 AM

In article m, "Dee D. Flint"
writes:

"Alun Palmer" wrote in message
.. .
(Len Over 21) wrote in
:

In article , Alun Palmer
writes:

I'm against that too. BTW, I got my EE degree in England, and you don't
have to go through any of that wholly irrelevant stuff. No English, no
social studies of any kind, no chemistry (which I understand is oftem
required over here).

Alun, California state undergraduate requirements in the 1960s had
two semesters of American History. Considering our history, like

from
the 1776 breakaway, that isn't comparable to what you had to do in
the UK. :-) :-) :-)

I don't know why there is such a fervor of the PCTAs to equate an
academic degree with an amateur radio license class that requires
a demonstrated skill at morsemanship. Maybe the PCTA have a need
to stay with the King Kode rulers of the ARS kingdom? :-)

LHA


I don't beleive either academic degrees or ham licences should require
unnecessary stuff, that's all.


Since there is no way to predict where your future interests may lie, it's
impossible to say unequivocally what is unnecessary stuff.


On itself, your statement implies that "everything" is known or that one
must study "everything" in order to be prepared. That's rather
impossible for any human to do in one lifetime. :-)

The phrase "adapt, improvise" comes to mind...as sometimes used by
one of the smaller US military branches. Considering just radio and
electronics and its continuing state of the art advance, it is better to be
prepared to adapt and improvise (one's learning process). Continual
rehashing of the old standards is not the wonder that some folks think
it is.

By example, those who have gone the full route of education, career,
etc., have more insight into the whole process and "what was required"
than those who have not finished.

The easy way out is to simply accept what the academics insist one
should study and learn. Noble enough, but consider that academics
(for all their high-brow intellectual whatsits) have their own SYA
agenda and need to to remain employed or to have income. A
continual supply of students is their source of income. shrug

LHA

Brian Kelly July 17th 03 01:56 AM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
(Brian Kelly) wrote in
om:


Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again?


I screwed that one to the wall good din I? It was late. The Scotch was
lousy.

Don't duck the bullet Alun, I don't have to try again, you bloody well
know what I mean.


I had to read it a few times. I think the reason for poor performance in
UK engineering has nothing to do with the quality of UK engineers and
everything to do with the culture of UK companies, in which the engineers
are not in charge, but instead the accountants are.


And this is not
because we don't study business subjects (we do), or because we don't do
English or History or 'Western Civilisation' in college (the accountants
don't either).


That's universal in capitalist democracies. But it's better than "the
other" system which proved to be mother of all socioeconomic duds of
the prior millenium.

There is a BSME/MBA I know extremely well who rose to the top of a
local technology-based quarter-billion dollar manufacturing
enterprise. He ran into a nasty show-stopping product design problem
which involved the need for far-end analytical work to resolve. He
groused to me about it. Sayeth me; "I toldja 'way back to get yer
PhD!" To which his response was, "Ah phooey, any time I want a PhD
I'll go out and buy one." Which is exactly what he did. That's our
fate and we done it to ourselves.


As I understand it (and I freely admit there are gaps in my knowledge of
your system), you can get a 4-year degree over here with 120 (?) semester-
hours of credit, and maybe only half of it has to be in your major (?).
When I sat down and tried to calculate it (from old timetables, since
there are no hours on my transcript, only grades) my 3-year UK degree
included about 150 semester-hours of classroom time, of which about 120
semester hours was in engineering subjects, the rest being things like
economics, finance, mathematics, etc.


I'm not a product of a traditional four year U.S. engineering school
either so I'm not much better off than you are when it comes to
comparing U.K apples to U.S. oranges, it's a mess. I trudged thru what
is called a five-year "cooperative education" undergrad mech eng
program. It's quite different from the four year schools' approach,
entrance requirements are similar but just about everything else is
different.

The classroom & lab side of the program consists of twelve 11 week
"terms" at a rate of four terms per year vs. semesters. Ten weeks in
class plus "exam week". The Freshman year is spent taking three terms
straight in class. Beyond the third term students serve two terms in
class then two terms out in industry per year on a rotating basis for
four years. The six-month "industry periods" are served working for
firms which are cooperating with the school by providing paid
engineering apprenticeships supervised by both the school and the
firms. In some instances government agencies are the employers.

By the time they drop your dipolma on you you've spent five years at
it but already have two years experience in whatever your field
happens to be. Once you're in you're in for five straight, no summers
at the beach working as a lifeguard BS. One of my brothers went thru
the ME program with me and we both came out with all our bills paid
without tapping our parents and with money in the bank. I doubt that
this is possible today but it's still better than not earning income
by working in your field as a student.

Credits are granted by the classroom hour and half credits are granted
for lab hours. 212 credits were required to graduate, I assume that's
still the case. Plus grades and averages were strictly by the numbers,
an 83 in a course was better than an 82, no such things as As, Bs and
Cs. 65 was the flunk point. All of which was/is completely
incompatible with the way the traditional schools pass out credits and
grades. Made transferring credits to and from other schools a *major*
pain except in the cases of similar schools like MIT and Cincinatti
Tech.

Course work was all over the map. Two or three mandatory terms (it's
been awhile . . !) of English were the only classroom humanities we
took but there were piles of humanities electives available. Two terms
of modern economics plus one of engineering economics were also
mandatory. There were a couple other nontechnical "mandatories" but
I've lost track.

One cute hook they inserted into the program was the "industry reading
courses". Mandatory humanities reading assignments completed while out
in the work force and were tested immediately upon return to class
terms. Normally involved 4-5 arcane tomes per term. History, lit,
psychology, anthropology, philosophy, etc. For which the student got
zero academic credit. None. Zip. Nada.

Class and "lab" work included mandatory military training (U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers ROTC) for two years and voluntary training for the
remaining three years. Completion of all five years of military
training resulted in a commission as a reserve or regular military
officer.

The technical courses were taught by a number of departments beyond
the mech eng people. Heavy doses of chemistry by the chem dept, even
heavier doses of physics by the physics dept thru Nukes 101, materials
science by the metalurgy dept, math out our ears of course via the
math dept, the early courses in applied mechanics from the civil
engineers, EE 101 & 102 from the EE dept. and on and on. From the
beginning thru around the seventh term all technical courses with some
minor variations were the same. With the exception of the biology
majors . One could hop from EE to ME to chem eng at will. From seventh
or so your department took over your mind and body and the rest is
probably very similar to your path.

The place was no fun at all. Gaining admittance was quite competitive
to begin with and when it was all done almost 70% of the Freshman
class had either flunked out or bagged it by the time graduation
rolled out. Parris Island North for five years, the largest private
engineering college on the planet. 85 MEs and something like 90 EEs
came out of my class of '63.

http://www.drexel.edu/


God help science, engineering and western civilization the day
American universities don't have license to pound at least some
modicum of literacy into the thick skulls of the geeklets.


Perhaps that is more of a comment on your high schools than your colleges?


The whole damned system from top to bottom. Stay away from that button
or you'll trigger a megabyte spleen dump and I'm in the mood for doing
just that.

w3rv

Alun Palmer July 17th 03 04:14 AM

Dave Heil wrote in
:

Alun Palmer wrote:

Mike Coslo wrote in
:


You must be related to our friend Vipul! At least you think
alike.

- Mike KB3EIA -



Well, he's clearly Indian,


That isn't clear at all.

and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me if we share some views in
common and don't buy into the received wisdom of the US of A.


That wouldn't surprise me either but both of you seem to prefer feeding
at the American trough.

Dave K8MN


In this economy it's less of a trough and more of a small dish

Brian July 17th 03 04:39 AM

(Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com...
"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...
"Brian Kelly" wrote in message
The "strawman designs" that Gary and I postulated did NOT contemplate
the use of SS across the whole band as an "underlay." The modulation was
completely different, with a fair amount of coding.


That's not my recollection at all


For a guy that thought I had his backyard to install antennas in, I'm
not surprised.

but for absolute certain any type of
HF SS would require some bandwidth far in excess of the bandwidths
currently permissable under the regs or acceptable by the users of the
so-called legacy modes on HF. The inherent bandwidth characteristic of
SS has made it destructively non-compatible with the modes currently
in use in HF ham bands. Ain't gonna happen in our lifetimes, ham HF SS
is a non-sequiter.


Meanwhile other services use spread spectrum and no one is the wiser.

all sorts of simulated channel impairments into the system to make

copying
as hard as you want ... without having to trash the underlying, reliable
communications system." Still rejected.)

Exactly and none of it flew then and it never will.


Why? ... if it looks to the user EXACTLY as "traditional Morse" one would
not be able to tell the difference (and therefore should have no logical,
rational
reason for rejecting it).


Your term IF is the Achilles heel of your whole argument. We've been
down this road, i.e., the problem with logical/rational being the
primanry drivers in ham radio. Ham radio is not a commercial service
where logic is the driver. The standard issue ham is into ham radio
for it's recreational value and the rest flows from there.


Not true. Many NCT's joined up for the public service aspect of the
service.

You just don't get it, do you?

they're neat electronic ping-pong games but IT AIN'T FRIGGING RADIO.
Nobody is gonna go play electronic ping-pong so that you and Coffman
can play band edge to band edge.


I *was* talking about RADIO ... a system that would communicate over
distances via radio ... just more reliably ... and THEN adding the
impariments
("challenge") at the receiving end to satisfy those who "like to dig the
weak
ones out of the noise/QRM."


Then you better find a like-minded programmer who has extensive
real-world actual experience with weak-signal DXing and contesting CW
and otherwise to write the code. You sure as hell are not qualified to
do that.


So we're back to "It's all about fast CW on HF," aren't we?

You're snapping around the edges of needing AI to pull off any such
code. We all know how easy that is (?!). IBM has a well-funded crew of
their comp sci & math geniuses and a mainfarme dedicated to
periodically trying to beat one human chess player's brain. And chess
is just a two-dimensional board game with rigid rules of play which
allows large chunks of time to make the decisions on each move. HF CW
contesting in particular has more dimensions than I can even start to
count and decsions are routinely made several times a second. Just for
openers. How ya gonna do it Carl? A bit of C++ and VB in a ham shack
PC? Yeah, right. Not even a decent pipe dream.


Kelley, w/o a dream, where you gonna go??? SOS, different day, that's
where! And you're happy with that slop? Obviously.

I used to start digital image processing with Landsat multispectral
images, using a microvax minicomputer, go to lunch or go home, and
hope it finished when I got back to work. Todays desktops are at
least that good.

But you wouldn't know because you're trying to rest on your
rubber-band technology glory days same as most of the beepists of your
era. Pfft.

transmit data reliably over transcontinental distances ... with power
outputs on the order of 10 mW ... as an "underlay" to existing services

that don't even notice that they are there.

Times how many stations?


Quite a few, but to be honest I don't know the exact number (and if I
did, I couldn't say).


Bullet = Ducked


You have no imagination. That's why you chose mech rather than
electro. You can visualize a lever, but cannot visualize an electron.

I notice that TAPR has given up trying to get spread spectrum on the
air. Nobody in TAPR cares enough about SS to work thru the bugs.
There's a loud statement about ham SS.


IMHO, TAPR's SS effort was doomed from the start by being overly
complex.


You're pretty good at that yourself.


And you excel at undercomplex, yesterdays technology.

Beep beep.

Dick Carroll July 17th 03 04:52 AM



Brian wrote:

(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
(Brian) wrote in message . com...
(N2EY) wrote in message . com...
(Brian) wrote in message . com...
(N2EY) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(Brian) writes:

(N2EY) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(Brian) writes:

Still no citation from Arnie concerning his claim that NCI is on
record for less technical exams.

Still no answer from you concerning these questions about your alleged /T5
operation:

What callsign was used?
What rigs and antennas were used?
Who did the equipment belong to?
What amateur bands and modes were used?
What countries and continents were worked?
How were the QSLs delivered?

Why is it alleged?

Because you haven't provided any information about or confirmation of your
alleged operation.

Then how do you know about it?

You have claimed here and elsewhere to have operated /T5 about a
decade ago. But you provided no details, even when directly asked. So
any reasonable person has cause to be skeptical.

Lemme think this through.

After you and several minions


I don't have any "minions".


Perhaps they were bunions.

have performed an exhaustive search
concerning my operation in Somalia, and having turned up nothing, you
want me to corroborate my own operation so that you'll be less
skeptical?


Nope.

I and some others have asked some basic, simple, straightforward
questions about your alleged /T5 operations.


After having exhausted all other venues.

You have repeatedly
avoided answering any of them.


Yes, that is correct. But if you do your research you'll find I have
stated much of what you asked in previous posts to rrap. Get to work.

Ha! That's a good one.


Go ahead and believe what you want to believe. You will anyway
regardless of anything I could say.

Why don't you just answer the questions?


How is it that you didn't believe me then, but you're willing to
believe me now? I just don't get it.

To be honest, I don't think there is any answer that will satisfy you.

Brian


At least not a truthful one.


Ryan, KC8PMX July 17th 03 05:11 AM


"Dee D. Flint" wrote in message
y.com...

"Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message
...
How about a different parallel?? Drivers licenses! How many here have
earned ALL endorsements/license classes for their drivers license? i.e.
motorcycle operators permit etc.

Those that haven't must just be lazy too eh?


Not a valid comparison the way you put it. If the person isn't interested
in the privileges, it doesn't mean he is lazy for not getting the
endorsement. It's the person who wants the privileges and isn't willing

to
get the endorsement that would be considered lazy.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


I disagree based on statements made by others here before. Having both HF
and VHF+ access to all of the amateur radio spectrum (i.e. upgrading all the
way to extra) is so important to some, then the parallel is there. Not
exercising the full advantages of the license.

I have had 2 CSCE's now for the morse code test, and let both of them slip
as I see no need exercise the use of those privileges, nor can I at this
point due to operational limitations. But apparently upgrades are even more
important to some here more than god.



--
Ryan, KC8PMX
FF1-FF2-MFR-(pending NREMT-B!)
--. --- -.. ... .- -. --. . .-.. ... .- .-. . ..-. .. .-. . ..-.
... --. .... - . .-. ...



Brian July 17th 03 12:09 PM

Dick Carroll wrote in message ...

You seem to think you've got some corner on such activity. Hams and other hobbyists
(like ol' CW loving me) have been doing WEFAX for a couple decades, at least. Or were, until the HF
stations went off the air.
Now I just go to a website and bring it up on the screen. Pfft.

ur still a dud.


You can still do APT. Those stations aren't off the air, so get to work.

Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 15 Jul 2003 15:07:34 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:

And learning history in an EE degree somehow helped you to do that???


It taught me to think. It taught me that we live in a culture, not
on a circuit board.


That hardly needs formal education. Besides, didn't you do history in high
school?


And Middle School. And elementary school. All on different levels.

It taught me not appear as an ignoramus before
non-technical folk.


Aha, so it's useful in cocktail parties!


And dealing with relatives, friends, and neighbors as well as
strangers in the many non-technical nexii of our lives.

I can almost say the same for my law school (doctorate level)


It used to be an LLB, as I'm sure you know.


It may be that way in Europe and the UK, but there haven't been any
accredited LLB programs in the US for decades. My degree is a JD
(Juris Doctor) - the equivalent of an MD.

Oh yes, I forget - in the UK they adress dentists and surgeons as
"Mister". We do things differently here in the Former Colonies.

education. Some of the courses seemed like a waste of time....but
in practice I find that the background that I got from the
"unnecessary" specialty courses was really necessary for the proper
practice of my legal specialty.


I reckon you must be a patent attorney, Phil. If so, that is a major
understatement. I'm a patent agent, BTW.


You reckon incorrectly. Although I am eligible for same, I have
never had any reason to take the exam for patent attorney.

I've made it quite clear in my postings that my specialty is
communication regulatory law - 29 years with the gov'mint and 8
years in private practice (plus 10 years of private practice in
engineering).

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane



Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 16 Jul 2003 02:56:19 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:

I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional
education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K.
technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita
or on any other basis.

Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again?


It's a test of "spot and ignore the typo". Took me one reading.

You failed.

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane



Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 16 Jul 2003 03:04:30 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:

Alun, what a curious statement. What does being Indian and British,
and not American, that allows you to have some views in common?

Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it, but
it does give us a certain common heritage.


Yes - it makes each of you want to be the other. Just like an Oreo
cookie.

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane



Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 16 Jul 2003 05:23:30 -0700, Brian wrote:

Well who do you think ruled India during the Raj? I'm not proud of it, but
it does give us a certain common heritage.


Who do you think may have rules America prior to our independance?


According to a colleague of mine, the Cherokees.

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane



Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 16 Jul 2003 03:06:13 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:

Well, here's an idea. Should you find later that you need to learn about
something, have you ever heard of books? I find them very useful.


How long does one have to read the book to learn how to play the
piano?

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane



Phil Kane July 17th 03 04:28 PM

On 16 Jul 2003 14:28:18 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:

I had to read it a few times. I think the reason for poor performance in
UK engineering has nothing to do with the quality of UK engineers and
everything to do with the culture of UK companies, in which the engineers
are not in charge, but instead the accountants are.


If you don't think that that is the case "over here" too, you have
not been paying attention to how Corporate America is being run.

And this is not
because we don't study business subjects (we do), or because we don't do
English or History or 'Western Civilisation' in college (the accountants
don't either).


In other words, your "professional education" is basically trade school
programs.

What a waste.

As I understand it (and I freely admit there are gaps in my knowledge of
your system), you can get a 4-year degree over here with 120 (?) semester-
hours of credit, and maybe only half of it has to be in your major (?).
When I sat down and tried to calculate it (from old timetables, since
there are no hours on my transcript, only grades) my 3-year UK degree
included about 150 semester-hours of classroom time, of which about 120
semester hours was in engineering subjects, the rest being things like
economics, finance, mathematics, etc.


IIRC my BEE degree was more like 180 hours (4 years of 20-credit
semesters plus one summer of Surveying -- did you take that by any
chance? It came in real handy when I built my first house and when
I studied Real Estate Law in law school and when I discuss or plot
radio path and contour calculations or directional antenna patterns
with clients or even map-reading and "orienteering" with non-technical
hiking friends and relatives.

No chemistry in an engineering program? This is not the same as a
Literature or Cultural Humasnitiers course. This is basic science.

In an EE program we took a year of chemistry (class and lab), two
years of physics, one year of advanced math, and assorted courses in
non-EE engineering subjects such as thermodynamics, mechanics of
materials, atomic physics, and surveying, plus our rigorous EE power
and electronics courses.

That was 50 years ago. Now they require a lot more of "non-EE"
stuff such as environmental engineering and medical engineering
The school has acquired a reputation for application research in
those fields.

Otherwise one is not a rell-educated engineer - one is a geek with a
degree.

--
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane




N2EY July 17th 03 05:45 PM

(Brian Kelly) wrote in message . com...
"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...
"Brian Kelly" wrote in message
The "strawman designs" that Gary and I postulated did NOT contemplate
the use of SS across the whole band as an "underlay." The modulation was
completely different, with a fair amount of coding.


That's not my recollection at all but for absolute certain any type of
HF SS would require some bandwidth far in excess of the bandwidths
currently permissable under the regs or acceptable by the users of the
so-called legacy modes on HF. The inherent bandwidth characteristic of
SS has made it destructively non-compatible with the modes currently
in use in HF ham bands. Ain't gonna happen in our lifetimes, ham HF SS
is a non-sequiter.


The really important question is simply "how would such a system be
implemented?" IOW, who is going to develop it, set the standards,
build the equipment, put the stations on the air, etc.? I can imagine
all sorts of really neat systems I'd like to see (say, a
highspeed/"wideband" microwave digital network linking major cities
via ham radio, over which hams could have all sorts of QSOs through
local portals) but who is gonna put up the bux and do the work? I
don't see Carl, Vipul, Gary or anybody else stepping up to take on
even a piece of it.

all sorts of simulated channel impairments into the system to make
copying
as hard as you want ... without having to trash the underlying, reliable
communications system." Still rejected.)

Exactly and none of it flew then and it never will.


Why?


See above. Somebody has to actually DO it. Not just talk about it.

Lookit G3PLX and PSK-31. Guy developed an idea, worked on it for
years, recruited knowledgeable hams around the world for tests. One of
whom is a really sharp local Ph.D EE ham known to both W3RV and me.
When the bugs were worked out, they just gave it away to the ham
community - free software, step-by-step articles on how to connect
your lapper to your rig, excellent articles on how it works and why.

Once it was public, other hams got involved in software improvements,
purpose-built rigs like the Warbler, demos, more articles, books, etc.
Now mainstream "PSK-31 ready" rigs are beginning to show up on the
amateur market.

How many years and how many hours and how many
dollars/pounds/lira/shekels, all of it donated, went into the
development of PSK-31?

... if it looks to the user EXACTLY as "traditional Morse" one would
not be able to tell the difference (and therefore should have no logical,
rational reason for rejecting it).


Your term IF is the Achilles heel of your whole argument.


Right. There's no way it will look exactly like the real thing.

Kinda like the idea of having athletes all over the world run the
Boston Marathon on computerized treadmills surrounded by
high-definition TVs, with automated weather simulation (heat, rain,
wind, etc.) They're all covering the same distance under the same
conditions, right? No need to close all those roads and deal with all
the headaches of a real road race, right? And lots more people will be
able to participate, without all the hassle of getting to Boston and
back, qualifying for the race, etc.

We've been
down this road, i.e., the problem with logical/rational being the
primanry drivers in ham radio. Ham radio is not a commercial service
where logic is the driver. The standard issue ham is into ham radio
for it's recreational value and the rest flows from there.


I gotta disagree here. Ham radio is driven by as much "logic" as any
other radio service - often much more. But the driving forces are
different. Take military comms - they want very high accuracy, very
high security, very high speed, very high reliability. Size, weight
and power consumption considerations vary all over the place from
"doesn't matter too much" to "gotta be kept to absolute minimum". Cost
and complexity are way, way, way down on the list. "Fun" isn't on the
list at all. Radio is just a comms tool to the military folks - if
something 'better' comes along tomorrow, they'll be all over it.

Which is where those surplus 55-75 foot tubular-section towers we've
used on FD came from. They were originally meant for terrestrial
microwave. You know what they cost the ham who wants one. You don't
wanna know what Uncle paid for 'em. Ya think Uncle really cared what
the resale value of those towers would be?

For hams, the top of the list is almost always "FUN". High on the list
are cost, size, complexity, required maintenance, ease of use, useful
life, resale value, etc. But FUN is the biggie, and if it ain't fun
according to the perception of the "user", there ain't gonna be no
users. And each user has his/her own definition of "FUN".

Pretty logical system, really.

Heck, the whole anti-code-test argument comes down to "why require
folks to learn something that they don't think will be fun to do?" and
"the people who see it as fun will learn it without a test".

they're neat electronic ping-pong games but IT AIN'T FRIGGING RADIO.
Nobody is gonna go play electronic ping-pong so that you and Coffman
can play band edge to band edge.


I *was* talking about RADIO ... a system that would communicate over
distances via radio ... just more reliably ... and THEN adding the
impariments
("challenge") at the receiving end to satisfy those who "like to dig the
weak ones out of the noise/QRM."


And by doing so you miss the whole point of what makes it fun in the
first place: the fact that it's real and not a simulation.

Then you better find a like-minded programmer who has extensive
real-world actual experience with weak-signal DXing and contesting CW
and otherwise to write the code. You sure as hell are not qualified to
do that.


I dunno, maybe Carl and Gary are able to do it. But will they? Don't
hold yer breath. Classic 'tie the bell on the cat' situation. See
above PSK-31 story.

You're snapping around the edges of needing AI to pull off any such
code. We all know how easy that is (?!). IBM has a well-funded crew of
their comp sci & math geniuses and a mainfarme dedicated to
periodically trying to beat one human chess player's brain. And chess
is just a two-dimensional board game with rigid rules of play which
allows large chunks of time to make the decisions on each move.


The system they use also "cheats" in a way, in that it has an enormous
library of games that have been played before accessible. It can look
at a particular board position and check if that particular position
ever came up in any recorded game before, then see what was done and
how it came out.

Does the computer have "fun" playing? Just ask it.

HF CW
contesting in particular has more dimensions than I can even start to
count and decsions are routinely made several times a second. Just for
openers. How ya gonna do it Carl? A bit of C++ and VB in a ham shack
PC? Yeah, right. Not even a decent pipe dream.


Heck, just network everybody's computer together and we can run a
virtual contest whenever we want. No need for towers, amplifiers, etc.
Set up any virtual station you want.

transmit data reliably over transcontinental distances ... with power
outputs on the order of 10 mW ... as an "underlay" to existing services

that don't even notice that they are there.


Do the services who "don't know they are there" know what to look for?
Or do they just think their noise floor is a little higher?

Times how many stations?


Quite a few, but to be honest I don't know the exact number (and if I
did, I couldn't say).


Bullet = Ducked

Speaking of which, consider how many CW QSOs at 40 wpm could fit in
that 150 kHz of 20 meters. At least 300 without interference, meaning
at least 600 hams on the air in that space without frequency re-use.
And that's using really simple, dirt-cheap equipment like the receiver
I built almost 30 years ago whose pictures are now on the HBR site.

I notice that TAPR has given up trying to get spread spectrum on the
air. Nobody in TAPR cares enough about SS to work thru the bugs.
There's a loud statement about ham SS.


IMHO, TAPR's SS effort was doomed from the start by being overly
complex.


Complex compared to what? More complex than a PC? Or was there too
much talk and too little action?

Maybe it was a solution in search of a problem.

73 de Jim, N2EY

Brian Kelly July 17th 03 06:28 PM

Dick Carroll wrote in message ...
Brian wrote:



(like ol' CW loving me) have been doing WEFAX for a couple decades, at least. Or were, until the HF
stations went off the air.
Now I just go to a website and bring it up on the screen. Pfft.

ur still a dud.


Eminently ignorable man child. They happen.

Brian July 17th 03 08:16 PM

Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
Dave Heil wrote in
:

Alun Palmer wrote:

Mike Coslo wrote in
:


You must be related to our friend Vipul! At least you think
alike.

- Mike KB3EIA -



Well, he's clearly Indian,


That isn't clear at all.

and I'm British, so it wouldn't surprise me if we share some views in
common and don't buy into the received wisdom of the US of A.


That wouldn't surprise me either but both of you seem to prefer feeding
at the American trough.

Dave K8MN


In this economy it's less of a trough and more of a small dish


There are alternatives. Just the other day my neighbor commented that
he was considering a move to Pakistan or India for the opportunity to
build a better life for himself and his family. ;^)

Mike Coslo July 17th 03 09:49 PM

Larry Roll K3LT wrote:

And unlike yours, most of those opinions are being made by people with
genuine operating experience. Sorry about the truth, Kim -- I know it
hurts you, but I'm not going to look at a pile of crap on the floor and call
it a bowl of cherries.



I'm almost afraid to ask what your last meal was before your procedure,
Larry!! 8^)

Glad it went well, tho'.

- Mike KB3EIA -




Dee D. Flint July 17th 03 11:47 PM


"Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message
...

"Dee D. Flint" wrote in message
y.com...

"Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message
...
How about a different parallel?? Drivers licenses! How many here have
earned ALL endorsements/license classes for their drivers license?

i.e.
motorcycle operators permit etc.

Those that haven't must just be lazy too eh?


Not a valid comparison the way you put it. If the person isn't

interested
in the privileges, it doesn't mean he is lazy for not getting the
endorsement. It's the person who wants the privileges and isn't willing

to
get the endorsement that would be considered lazy.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


I disagree based on statements made by others here before. Having both HF
and VHF+ access to all of the amateur radio spectrum (i.e. upgrading all

the
way to extra) is so important to some, then the parallel is there. Not
exercising the full advantages of the license.


Somehow I think you are misunderstanding my point of view. If they do not
wish to exercise the privileges that come with an upgrade, then there is no
need to upgrade and that's fine with me. It's those who want the privileges
and whine about having to do the work to get them that bother me.


I have had 2 CSCE's now for the morse code test, and let both of them slip
as I see no need exercise the use of those privileges, nor can I at this
point due to operational limitations. But apparently upgrades are even

more
important to some here more than god.


Again, no one has a problem with a person who prefers not to upgrade and
explores those areas for which he/she is licensed. The problem arises when
someone wants the upgrade privileges without the upgrade work.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


Brian Kelly July 18th 03 01:33 AM

"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ...


Hey Carl, refresh me, how many "channels" to we have on 20M? Once a
Tech always Tech huh?


{Decorum off}
Bite me.
{Decorum back on}


I love it when you talk dirty Carl.

"Channel impariments" refer to the "propagation channel" and if you
had an idea of where to beg, borrow, rent, or steal a clue you'd
know that ... but then again, it's a technical term ... I guess I shouldn't
expect that you would be familiar with it ...


I know exactly what a channel is. Lotta people have made the mistake
of underestimating what I actually know Carl.


I'll tellya what the average contester's response to your basic
concept would be: "Why would I go thru all these computer pushups when
all I have to do is fire up my radios and get on the air and have the
real thing?"


Is loading a program onto your PC such a difficult thing for you?
Poor fellow.


No Carl, I'm actually quite adept at loading software. I'm also quite
adept at getting on the air without needing a computer which I much
prefer unless I want to run RTTY or PSK/MSK.

The idea is to provide the same user experience in terms of noise,
fading, static, QRM, etc. WITHOUT actually trashing the band
in a way that precludes other uses at the same time.


Yeah, uh-huh. Everybody give up real-time on-the-air interaction with
the natural vagaries of propagation, interferences and "unprocessed"
direct contact with other humans and climb into their Winboxes and
play computer games while Stevenson & Coffman Inc. trash the bands
their way.

No even after pigs learn to fly Carl.

Don't take my word for any of it Carl. Request the NPRM and see what
happens. Oughta be a piece of cake for you since you know all them
guys.

As far as "reliable and robust" is concerned if I need both or either
all I have to do is dial into Ma Bell's system or log in via my ISP.
Who needs your "help" if that's all I want?


And when you need that reliability and robustness for emergency comms
and conditions are poor? Oh, yea, you rely on Morse ... despite the
fact that there are alternatives that are "better" (as defined in my reply
to Jim) ... how quaint.


Bull****. When were the last three times any hams handled or tried to
handle any serious emergency over a difficult HF path with any mode?
"Reliability and robustness for emergency comms" is about the weakest
justification for your "system" I can imagine.

I suspect that I could shred your system reliability claims with a few
keystrokes in Mathcad by simply running a system parts count vs.
reliability analysis. How many parts are there in a laptop anyway?

I'm not into RACES and never stated that I was. But I have passed more
third party long-haul H&W traffic than you'll ever manage to do and
every bit of it was via SSB. Plus I've passed a bit of minor emergency
traffic via vhf FM.

I have two charged & ready to roll 2M 5w HTs with gain antennas right
here Carl and a couple 50w 2M mobile rigs. I can toss either in the
car and have it on the air in a minute or two. If things get really
nasty I also have an HF mobile rig I can also "deploy" in the car. And
I don't need a computer to do any of it. Everybody knows that only
place in the ham bands you'll likely run into a real emergency is on
2M and I'm good to go right now while you're still "planning" some
grandiose homebrewed Lehigh County EOC. Not that I expect that to
actually happen of course.


Carl - wk3c


w3rv

Mike Coslo July 18th 03 02:13 AM

Phil Kane wrote:
On 16 Jul 2003 03:06:13 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:


Well, here's an idea. Should you find later that you need to learn about
something, have you ever heard of books? I find them very useful.



How long does one have to read the book to learn how to play the
piano?



Game, set, match, Phil......


- Mike KB3EIA -



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