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In article , "Phil Kane"
writes: On 11 Jul 2003 10:59:42 -0700, N2EY wrote: As for technical contributions, the writtens cover a wide variety of subjects at a very basic level. Meaning you have to know a little bit about a lot of things to pass, but knowing a lot about a few things doesn't help you. The person who is really interested in, say, antenna systems, is forced to learn all sorts of stuff about other subjects to pass the written tests - stuff that he/she may never use and isn't interested in. Stuff which is not needed for the proper and legal operation of an amateur station. Sounds like a hoop-jump. I for one have no problem requiring an applicant for an amateur license to be well-rounded in radio and electronics, both theory and operations including regulations. Nor do I, Phil. Seems to me that a person who is "well rounded" in amateur radio will have at least some skill in Morse code, though. There was lots of stuff that I was "forced" to learn in all three of my professions (which I sometimes refer to as shoeshine boy, baggage handler, and bus washer) but even though I may never use it in my specialty, it was necessary to learn it in order to be a "well-rounded" individual who can easily follow and evaluate what specialists in those other fields say rather than just smiling, nodding my head, and not having a clue. Same here. But amateur radio is an avocation, not a profession. Applying it to ham radio, the operator who may be a good traffic handler but doesn't have a clue about what OET 65 requires of all ham operators (OK folks, look it up) is going to be behind the eight-ball if s/he's not in compliance. Ditto for the one who is an antenna maven but doesn't have a clue about digital communication protocols and emission masks. Only if the person wants to do those things. Without the "generalist" background I'd be just another narrow geek. Exactly! I'm sure you realize that I was in "devil's advocate" mode. Just applying the anticodetest rhetoric to the writtens. 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane "Highball the scanner" 73 de Jim, N2EY "No defects found...." |
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