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In article , PAMNO
(N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. The FCC already does that with other communications service providers (cable TV in main but also telephone cable and incidental RF radiation from electric power lines). The enforcement is going to be a total bitch of a job for BPL. The FCC is way, way down on facilities to test and measure BPL installations and is going to have to really pork up its budget to come close to good measurements in urban areas especially. It will be a HUGE task. If it gets done. It probably won't. FCC is not bound by any strict deadlines for enforcement. Well, what are you going to DO about it? Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. There's no good signs evident that the FCC is coming even close to realizing the gargantuan task of monitoring BPL of the future. Mikey Powell and company have been sold on BPL "for the masses" and that's that...a big mass. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. The only perceivable way to fight BPL is now after-the-fact, like the Cedar Rapids group did, apparently successfully. But, that takes a concerted group effort in each amateur radio locality. ARRL can't be dependent as the "big gun" to fight BPL. But they *can* give needed help, and act to coordinate efforts. And if nothing else, ARRL has continued to publicize the BPL threat both inside and outside the amateur community, and to spread accurate information on what is going on. What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? Identify that "help." The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. They TOOK ACTION. They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. "Maybies" don't cut it. Many highly-touted new technologies have fallen by the wayside once their disadvantages became known. Yeah, like telephones, radio, heavier-than-air craft, television and [ta-dahh] cellular telephony and the Internet! Right. All "big disadvantaged things" that nobody "needs." At time now, one in three Americans has a cell phone subscription and one out of five American households have some form of Internet access. According to the U.S. Census Bureau. But, what do they know, right? There's also the economic angle. The price of DSL keeps dropping, as does Wi-Fi, while the areas covered by those technologies and cable keep expanding. If BPL cannot compete in price and performance, it's all over. "Price of DSL keeps dropping?!?!?" Look again. Who are the Wi-Fi (really Wi-FAX) providers? IEEE 802.16 standard is hardly dry in its approved specifications for Wi-FAX and you are thinking it is all over the USA? You are avoiding the issues by trying to hide. Access BPL radiates incidental RF radiation NOW in HF and some at low-VHF. By test. By measurements of both government and private industry groups. Say goodbye to low-level HF signals if BPL comes to your QTH, at least for a while. Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? |
In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes: In article , PAMNO (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. FCC has the authority to shut down a source of interference. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Or if it causes harmful interference. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Only with FCC approval. FCC also regulates communications by "wire" as well as radio. That's why a "56K" modem can't go quite that fast. All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Not yet. But, if FCC were of a mind to, they could set Part 15 levels even lower than the German levels. Or rule that BPL systems require certification before entering operation. Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? There's no error. FCC has the authority - if they chose to use it. They haven't. Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. There's no reason to shout, Len. Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. Why? The FCC already does that with other communications service providers (cable TV in main but also telephone cable and incidental RF radiation from electric power lines). The enforcement is going to be a total bitch of a job for BPL. The FCC is way, way down on facilities to test and measure BPL installations and is going to have to really pork up its budget to come close to good measurements in urban areas especially. It will be a HUGE task. If it gets done. It probably won't. FCC is not bound by any strict deadlines for enforcement. Well, what are you going to DO about it? What can a mere amateur like me do about it? The professionals keep saying BPL is a good thing, needed for homeland security, creates jobs, etc. I filed comments on the NOI but it apparently made no difference. Both the FCC Chairman and Our President say we need BPL. Our President has left it up to NTIA to solve any interference issues. What counterarguments can I offer that will change all their minds? Besides - you keepo telling me that FCC can't stop BPL anyway. Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" I've never said that, Len. And all I have is a dialup connection. The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. Have you actually heard any of it? And why are you so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. There's no good signs evident that the FCC is coming even close to realizing the gargantuan task of monitoring BPL of the future. Mikey Powell and company have been sold on BPL "for the masses" and that's that...a big mass. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? No. Did someone appoint you to that position? Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. Do you think it would help? I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. I must have missed that in your comments. Did it help stop BPL? The only perceivable way to fight BPL is now after-the-fact, like the Cedar Rapids group did, apparently successfully. But, that takes a concerted group effort in each amateur radio locality. ARRL can't be dependent as the "big gun" to fight BPL. But they *can* give needed help, and act to coordinate efforts. And if nothing else, ARRL has continued to publicize the BPL threat both inside and outside the amateur community, and to spread accurate information on what is going on. What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? Just some simple facts, Len. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. Neither are you. You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. I think it really bothers you that ARRL is playing any role at all in it. You ever meet Ed Hare, W1RFI, or see his presentation? The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? I don't know. But both the Iowa group and the affected amateur thanked them. Identify that "help." Why? Do you think they would have thanked ARRL for no help? The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? Why would they thank ARRL if they "WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES." They TOOK ACTION. Nobody denies that. They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. They experienced demonstrable interference from BPL. What do you suggest others do? They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? I'm not. I'm simply asking some questions. You haven't provided answers. I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. How long ago was that? Did it involve HF interference elimination? Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? I'm not making any judgements nor waving any fingers, Len. I'm just asking questions. And I have done a few things. Probably more than you. Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? What *are* you talking about, Len? Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Doesn't matter. If something interferes with licensed radio services, FCC has regulatory power. Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] Nope. Doesn't work that way. Because the internet information can cross state boundaries, FCC has authority. Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" Nope. Are you? IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. Like the APX-6. Converted by hams for use on 1296 MHz. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. Actually, it's an acronym. Sort of. This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. Yes, it is. The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. I could have told you that a year ago, Len. What's with all the shouting? "Maybies" don't cut it. Many highly-touted new technologies have fallen by the wayside once their disadvantages became known. Yeah, like telephones, radio, heavier-than-air craft, television and [ta-dahh] cellular telephony and the Internet! Right. All "big disadvantaged things" that nobody "needs." Beta VCRs, the Iridium system, "quadraphonic" sound, 8 track tapes, old-format laser discs.... Heck, technology changes so fast these days that the IRS considers a computer fully depreciated in just 3 years. At time now, one in three Americans has a cell phone subscription and one out of five American households have some form of Internet access. According to the U.S. Census Bureau. But, what do they know, right? What is the significance of those facts, Len? Neither has anything to do with BPL or amateur radio. There's also the economic angle. The price of DSL keeps dropping, as does Wi-Fi, while the areas covered by those technologies and cable keep expanding. If BPL cannot compete in price and performance, it's all over. "Price of DSL keeps dropping?!?!?" Look again. I did. My local providers have reduced the price of DSL repeatedly. It's getting so that I'm seriously considering changing to DSL as part of a bundled package of cell, POTS and internet access. Who are the Wi-Fi (really Wi-FAX) providers? IEEE 802.16 standard is hardly dry in its approved specifications for Wi-FAX and you are thinking it is all over the USA? Not at all. But it's in many locations and growing fast. No interference problems like BPL. Complete portability. But hey, what do I know? Ask WK3C, Carl Stevenson. He's much more knowledgeable about that stuff than I. You are avoiding the issues by trying to hide. Not at all, Len. I'm right here. Access BPL radiates incidental RF radiation NOW in HF and some at low-VHF. By test. By measurements of both government and private industry groups. Interesting that you don't mention ARRL's measurements and observations. Did you see the videos? Say goodbye to low-level HF signals if BPL comes to your QTH, at least for a while. Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why does that bother you, Len? Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? I'm not hiding from anything. Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. Must have interfered with lutefisk production. The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. Yep - even though none of the test sites are truly rural. Note that the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan gave is VEC testing and 10 year amateur licenses. The Republican administration of George Bush (the elder) gave us medical waivers for code tests, the no-code-test Technician license, and set in motion the end of the maritime Morse requirements. The Republican administration of "now" supported the revision of treaty part S25.5 to eliminate the requirement for Morse code testing, thereby clearing the path for the elimination of all code testing in the USA. I recall someone here saying the FCC was the "expert agency" composed of "professional regulators" who had looked at the arguments and "made the right choice". Or words to that effect, anyway. Now you tell me the FCC doesn't knwo what they're doing? See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. I don't think you'd talk to them that way in person. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Not at all. Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? Not me. I'm not the one yelling and screaming and calling people names. |
In article , PAMNO
(N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. FCC has the authority to shut down a source of interference. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Or if it causes harmful interference. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Only with FCC approval. FCC also regulates communications by "wire" as well as radio. That's why a "56K" modem can't go quite that fast. Nope. No "FCC approval" required as long as Access BPL doesn't have incidental RF radiation beyond Commission regulations. You best reread the Telecommunications Act of 1996. All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Not yet. But, if FCC were of a mind to, they could set Part 15 levels even lower than the German levels. Or rule that BPL systems require certification before entering operation. Not with MIKEY Powerll as Chief Commissioner or MIKEY Gallagher as the NTIA acting secretary. Two toadies for the prez for the price of one! Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? There's no error. FCC has the authority - if they chose to use it. They haven't. As long as an Access BPL provider doesn't radiate incidental RF beyond Commission regulations, the FCC CANNOT DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT. You still don't understand just who approves or disapproves a provider. Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. There's no reason to shout, Len. "Shout?" Your eyes are too sensitive to opposition. Turn down your display brightness or wear shades. [wear shades and no one will recognize you in here? hi, hi. :-) ] Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. Why? To LEARN something. The FCC already does that with other communications service providers (cable TV in main but also telephone cable and incidental RF radiation from electric power lines). The enforcement is going to be a total bitch of a job for BPL. The FCC is way, way down on facilities to test and measure BPL installations and is going to have to really pork up its budget to come close to good measurements in urban areas especially. It will be a HUGE task. If it gets done. It probably won't. FCC is not bound by any strict deadlines for enforcement. Well, what are you going to DO about it? What can a mere amateur like me do about it? The professionals keep saying BPL is a good thing, needed for homeland security, creates jobs, etc. I filed comments on the NOI but it apparently made no difference. Both the FCC Chairman and Our President say we need BPL. Our President has left it up to NTIA to solve any interference issues. Then why are you blaming others who HAVE DONE SOMETHING because you feel inadequate? That's irrational. What counterarguments can I offer that will change all their minds? Besides - you keepo telling me that FCC can't stop BPL anyway. I don't "keepo" anything. :-) Get creative. Don't sit around like a self-made guru and font of knowledge without any spritzer. We can't help your feelings of inadequacy... Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" I've never said that, Len. No? Not even once? :-) And all I have is a dialup connection. Now, now...you've said many, many times you "know' what FCC will do! You pretend to be an "insider" with all that "knowledge." :-) The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. Have you actually heard any of it? Only recordings. I HAVE heard plenty of random garbage from HV corona, neon signs, arc welders, low-power RF bulbs now all the sales rage in do-it-yourself stores to "cut down on electricity consumption." And why are you so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. I am a radio professional. Professionals GET concerned. There's no good signs evident that the FCC is coming even close to realizing the gargantuan task of monitoring BPL of the future. Mikey Powell and company have been sold on BPL "for the masses" and that's that...a big mass. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? No. Did someone appoint you to that position? Never claimed to. :-) YOU are the one trying to ask leading questions. Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. Do you think it would help? It would help ME. :-) It wouldn't be done unless BPL was a fait accompli. I think it is. I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. I must have missed that in your comments. Did it help stop BPL? My telling the truth in here hasn't stopped you one bit. :-) I take it you aren't concerned about Access BPL? You feel NO danger of it polluting HF in the near future? You should. All radio amateurs should. Now if you've READ the NTIA reports, READ the reports of the Cedar Rapids group on measured RF interference, you SHOULD be concerned. Be very concerned! But, no, your only "concern" is trying to have weak verbal fisticuffs in here, trying to "assert" yourself by talking down to others... Tsk. The only perceivable way to fight BPL is now after-the-fact, like the Cedar Rapids group did, apparently successfully. But, that takes a concerted group effort in each amateur radio locality. ARRL can't be dependent as the "big gun" to fight BPL. But they *can* give needed help, and act to coordinate efforts. And if nothing else, ARRL has continued to publicize the BPL threat both inside and outside the amateur community, and to spread accurate information on what is going on. What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? Just some simple facts, Len. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The FIRST league "reports" were only computer simulations. It took some months before they could hire a professional instrumentation service to get first-hand data on the REAL RF radiation. Money for the ARRL hired service came out of the league's budget. There was NO money reported spent by the Cedar Rapids amateur group. The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. Neither are you. Childish response. Tsk. Why are you objecting by doing such childish commentary? The only rational answer is that you really don't know much about BPL and/or want it to come in to everyone's urban residences....and radios. You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. I think it really bothers you that ARRL is playing any role at all in it. You ever meet Ed Hare, W1RFI, or see his presentation? Doesn't bother me at all. :-) It DOES bother the heck out of you, though, because you bristle and get most hostile at the slightest negativism of your beloved leadue! The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? I don't know. But both the Iowa group and the affected amateur thanked them. See? One little harmless NON-praise of ARRL and you get hostile. Tsk. Identify that "help." Why? So everyone one know what the Great ARRL can do! :-) Do you think they would have thanked ARRL for no help? I don't know what "they think." Telepathy not an attribute here. But, you try with the leading, hostile question again! :-) The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? I read their reports. Plural. Several Comments. Detailed data on their measurements, procedures, instrument descriptions, photos, drawings. Good stuff! Shows they know what they were doing. Why would they thank ARRL if they "WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES." They TOOK ACTION. Nobody denies that. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? :-) They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. They experienced demonstrable interference from BPL. What do you suggest others do? Why do you need ACTION spelled out? It's OBVIOUS. Obvious to all but those self-elect guru extras who sit in here and try to pick fights with others because they sound warnings and wave flags. :-) They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? I'm not. I'm simply asking some questions. You haven't provided answers. No, you are NOT "simply asking some questions." :-) You are deliberately asking leading questions with hostile intent. You just want to ARGUE...then try to wear others down in sheer length of "replies." :-) I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. How long ago was that? Did it involve HF interference elimination? A year and a half ago. Yes, it did. Sunnuvagun!!! :-) Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? I'm not making any judgements nor waving any fingers, Len. I'm just asking questions. Nope. You are provoking arguments for the sake of your love of arguments. :-) And I have done a few things. Probably more than you. How do you KNOW? Were you THERE? Did you help? Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? What *are* you talking about, Len? Tsk. All those many words and "answers" on aerospace and you pretend "not understanding?!?" Tsk. Describe to us your professional experience in aerospace. Give us a baseline of your judgement on space matters through actual space work performed. Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Doesn't matter. If something interferes with licensed radio services, FCC has regulatory power. But only to removal of the interfering source. So far, all the FCC has done about ordinary, pre-BPL electric power line RF interference has been a lot of letters. Of paper. Incomplete "regulation." ARINC reported it still has RF interference to one of its HF receiving sites. That's in their Comments. FCC hasn't exercised any "regulatory power" on clearing that up yet. Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] Nope. Doesn't work that way. Because the internet information can cross state boundaries, FCC has authority. Tsk, tsk. Best you go read that Telecommunications Act of 1996... You may have been admitted to a bar, but you haven't been admitted to a Bar Association. Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" Nope. Are you? Tsk. Jimmie can't take the slightest negativism. :-) IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. Like the APX-6. Converted by hams for use on 1296 MHz. To borrow something from Weiner von Brawn, your buddy in space - BWAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!! Jimmie, don't bother with WW2 surplus. Get with present-day transponders. Radar transponders. "Mode 4." What a "KIR" and "KIT" are. [military] What's an "ATCRBS?" Why the three pulses in transponders with the middle one at varying levels? Why use two pulses? Go get some REAL transponder info, stuff that is used NOW, not before you were born. Try Teledyne Electronics, Newbury Park, CA. My employer for a while. Made nothing but military radar transponders there. Tsk. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. Actually, it's an acronym. Sort of. CONTRACTION. Don't try to give birth to something new... This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. Yes, it is. Jimmie dropped into "nyah-nyah mode" again. He needs to trim up his coincidence detector, he be triggering on "fruit." :-) The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. I could have told you that a year ago, Len. What's with all the shouting? Tsk. "You could have told a year ago!" Well, why didn't you? How about two years ago? Three? Ten? Did you keep informed on the Norwegian-Swedish PLC trials? The potential was THERE. Did you keep informed on the following European PLC trials? In the UK? I doubt it. You are as informed on Access BPL as you pretend to be about the aerospace business. "Maybies" don't cut it. Many highly-touted new technologies have fallen by the wayside once their disadvantages became known. Yeah, like telephones, radio, heavier-than-air craft, television and [ta-dahh] cellular telephony and the Internet! Right. All "big disadvantaged things" that nobody "needs." Beta VCRs, the Iridium system, "quadraphonic" sound, 8 track tapes, old-format laser discs.... Heck, technology changes so fast these days that the IRS considers a computer fully depreciated in just 3 years. Tsk, tsk, tsk. I could have told you that in 1974 after the IRS audited my tax return for 1973 on my HP-35 scientific calculator. 3-year- depreciation. Nothing new. :-) At time now, one in three Americans has a cell phone subscription and one out of five American households have some form of Internet access. According to the U.S. Census Bureau. But, what do they know, right? What is the significance of those facts, Len? Neither has anything to do with BPL or amateur radio. What is the significance of your mighty verbose output on AEROSPACE and national economy and the presidential elections in an amateur radio policy newsgroup? Don't act childish or churlish with those attempts at leading questions. Google has it all archived. BPL *will* hit all amateurs, all SWLs, all CBers, all other radio services using HF right in the antenna port if they try to receive close to a BPL line. The test sites have already been measured to do that. There's also the economic angle. The price of DSL keeps dropping, as does Wi-Fi, while the areas covered by those technologies and cable keep expanding. If BPL cannot compete in price and performance, it's all over. "Price of DSL keeps dropping?!?!?" Look again. I did. My local providers have reduced the price of DSL repeatedly. It's getting so that I'm seriously considering changing to DSL as part of a bundled package of cell, POTS and internet access. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Who are the Wi-Fi (really Wi-FAX) providers? IEEE 802.16 standard is hardly dry in its approved specifications for Wi-FAX and you are thinking it is all over the USA? Not at all. But it's in many locations and growing fast. No interference problems like BPL. Complete portability. But hey, what do I know? Ask WK3C, Carl Stevenson. He's much more knowledgeable about that stuff than I. Tsk. I thought, indeed many thought, you knew MORE than anyone. Carl is an IEEE member. So am I. So what. WE can both access information on IEEE standards...as you can, if you try. You are NOT an IEEE member despite being a professional. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" :-) IEEE isn't advocating for BPL. Just the opposite. You want to oppose the IEEE's objections because your poor little newsgroup pride is "hurt?" Awwww.... You are avoiding the issues by trying to hide. Not at all, Len. I'm right here. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Access BPL radiates incidental RF radiation NOW in HF and some at low-VHF. By test. By measurements of both government and private industry groups. Interesting that you don't mention ARRL's measurements and observations. Did you see the videos? Did you see over a thousand comments on docket 04-37? Did you see the full Cedar Rapids amateur group comment and report on their Cedar Rapids BPL interference measurements/ I don't think so. All you want to do is "praise the league and pass all the mighty notion." :-) Say goodbye to low-level HF signals if BPL comes to your QTH, at least for a while. Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why does that bother you, Len? Why are you so antagonistic at anyone pointing out flaws with the ARRL? Do you want to spend your BPL objection time watching league videos and play-acting at being an RFI guru? Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? I'm not hiding from anything. Sure you are. You'd rather be in here ARGUING for the sake of arguing and trying to wear others down with your lengthy posts. :-) Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. Must have interfered with lutefisk production. Tsk, tsk, tsk. Ethnic slurs and insults? From the double-degreed ivy-trimmed wonder of the amateur world? No. There was no reported "interference" with whitefish treatments. Both Norway and Sweden trials showed considerable SWL interference. In case you wondered, Europe actually uses SW BC for listening. [not for treating fish with lye] The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. Yep - even though none of the test sites are truly rural. Note that the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan gave is VEC testing and 10 year amateur licenses. What has that to do with a BPL Pilot Project in Cedar Rapids in 2003-2004? Answer: Not a thing. The Republican administration of George Bush (the elder) gave us medical waivers for code tests, the no-code-test Technician license, and set in motion the end of the maritime Morse requirements. Poor baby. More with misdirection into presidential and party politics. Tsk, tsk, tsk. The Maritime World was already dropping manual telegraphy by 1990 and had begun earlier than that. The BPL test in Cedar Rapids doesn't have a thing to do with "medical waivers," "code tests," or Technician class licenses, or "setting much in motion" except showing that BPL is BAD for HF. The Republican administration of "now" supported the revision of treaty part S25.5 to eliminate the requirement for Morse code testing, thereby clearing the path for the elimination of all code testing in the USA. I recall someone here saying the FCC was the "expert agency" composed of "professional regulators" who had looked at the arguments and "made the right choice". Or words to that effect, anyway. Now you tell me the FCC doesn't knwo what they're doing? Jimmie lose his "professional" job? He only an "amateur?" Tsk. Why Jimmie so against "professionals?" Jimmie not get enough salary? See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. I don't think you'd talk to them that way in person. I KNOW I would, Jimmie. No problem to me. YOU do NOT know what I do, can do, have done...you won't listen or acknowledge. Tsk. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Not at all. Poor baby. Can't understand that BPL is going to be an RF polluter of HF and low-VHF frequencies. Wants to argue for the sake of argument. Tsk. Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? Not me. I'm not the one yelling and screaming and calling people names. They you go and chastise Steve Robeson. HE yells and screams and curses and calls other people names. He is an amateur. Another "extra." Police your own, chief. LHA / WMD |
Subject: BPL Pilot Project In Cedar Rapids Shuts Down
From: (Len Over 21) Date: 7/2/2004 4:33 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: In article , PAMNO (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Wrong....Again. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Not as long as it creates interference. All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. Then the FCC CAN stop it. Wether they will or not is subject to debate. But they CAN stop it. Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. The NTIA does not enact nor enforce FCC rules and regulations. Well, what are you going to DO about it? Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" No one has made that assertion in this thread, Lennie. Please try to keep your emotions from interfering with judgement. (oooooops....too late...) The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. Uh huh. And the FCC has issued dozens of letters to those carriers demanding they clean up their act or else. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. And you'd be escorted out of the proceeding by federal marshals. I see you're back to profanity to "effectively" express yourself. Tsk tsk tsk. Fourteen years of night school, down the drain. I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. So are your frequent misrepresentations of the character of Amateur Radio, your military record, and your professional "career". Your point? What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? Another personal attack on someone who didn't attack you personally. Putz. The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. That's not what he said. Nice try at yet another "smear the League". The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? Identify that "help." The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. They TOOK ACTION. They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. Uh huh. Supported by League elected field leadership. They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? He asked you a direct question. What have YOU done to help support the anti-BPL effort? I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. Uh huh. A non-answer "answer". Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? TWO personal attacks in one paragraph! How efficient! Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Clue: It IS a communications technique deployed via an FCC-controlled medium. Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." And that "incidental radiation" IS an FCC regulated value. Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] It already IS under FCC control. Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" Are you ever going to participate in that "civil debate" that you always lament others as allegededly not doing? IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. "Maybies" don't cut it. Was there a point to be made other than your attempt to detour the discussion over some typos? Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? A thorough read of Jim's posts indicate otherwise. And at least Jim HAS a license that allows him to USE those HF allocations. Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? Seems to me that YOU are the one suggesting one... Not that you are known for discussing anything WITHOUT making a "flame war" out of it... Steve, K4YZ |
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In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes: In article , PAMNO (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. FCC has the authority to shut down a source of interference. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Or if it causes harmful interference. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Only with FCC approval. FCC also regulates communications by "wire" as well as radio. That's why a "56K" modem can't go quite that fast. Nope. No "FCC approval" required as long as Access BPL doesn't have incidental RF radiation beyond Commission regulations. You best reread the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Why? All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Not yet. But, if FCC were of a mind to, they could set Part 15 levels even lower than the German levels. Or rule that BPL systems require certification before entering operation. Not with MIKEY Powerll as Chief Commissioner or MIKEY Gallagher as the NTIA acting secretary. Two toadies for the prez for the price of one! So you agree! The FCC has the power, they just won't use it with the current people in place there. Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? There's no error. FCC has the authority - if they chose to use it. They haven't. As long as an Access BPL provider doesn't radiate incidental RF beyond Commission regulations, the FCC CANNOT DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT. They can lower the regulatory limit. They can write new regulations, saying that existing Part 15 rules were meant for point-source radiators like computer monitors, not distributed systems like BPL. You still don't understand just who approves or disapproves a provider. You still ignore the role fo FCC in nonradio communications. Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. There's no reason to shout, Len. "Shout?" Yes, shout. As in using all capitals. Doing so doesn't make your words more true. Your eyes are too sensitive to opposition. Turn down your display brightness or wear shades. [wear shades and no one will recognize you in here? hi, hi. :-) ] We'd all recognize you, Len, even though you've tried to hide before. Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. Why? To LEARN something. What? The FCC already does that with other communications service providers (cable TV in main but also telephone cable and incidental RF radiation from electric power lines). The enforcement is going to be a total bitch of a job for BPL. The FCC is way, way down on facilities to test and measure BPL installations and is going to have to really pork up its budget to come close to good measurements in urban areas especially. It will be a HUGE task. If it gets done. It probably won't. FCC is not bound by any strict deadlines for enforcement. Well, what are you going to DO about it? What can a mere amateur like me do about it? The professionals keep saying BPL is a good thing, needed for homeland security, creates jobs, etc. I filed comments on the NOI but it apparently made no difference. Both the FCC Chairman and Our President say we need BPL. Our President has left it up to NTIA to solve any interference issues. Then why are you blaming others who HAVE DONE SOMETHING because you feel inadequate? I'm not blaming anybody. I'm simply asking a simple question and stating some facts. That's irrational. It is? How? What counterarguments can I offer that will change all their minds? Besides - you keepo telling me that FCC can't stop BPL anyway. I don't "keepo" anything. :-) Get creative. Don't sit around like a self-made guru and font of knowledge without any spritzer. We can't help your feelings of inadequacy... In other words, you don't know what to do either. So you lash out at me for asking the question. Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" I've never said that, Len. No? Not even once? :-) Nope. Now, I have said things like: "sometimes, CW gets through when other available modes do not" which is an absolutely true statement. And all I have is a dialup connection. Now, now...you've said many, many times you "know' what FCC will do! ?? How does that follow from having a dialup connection? You pretend to be an "insider" with all that "knowledge." :-) Not me. The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. Have you actually heard any of it? Only recordings. Recordings made by whom? Supplied to you how? I HAVE heard plenty of random garbage from HV corona, neon signs, arc welders, low-power RF bulbs now all the sales rage in do-it-yourself stores to "cut down on electricity consumption." None of them are BPL. And why are you so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. I am a radio professional. Really? I thought you were retired. Professionals GET concerned. Usually, only when there is money involved. Money for them. The UPLC folks are all professionals. There's no good signs evident that the FCC is coming even close to realizing the gargantuan task of monitoring BPL of the future. Mikey Powell and company have been sold on BPL "for the masses" and that's that...a big mass. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? No. Did someone appoint you to that position? Never claimed to. :-) You just act that way. YOU are the one trying to ask leading questions. What's the problem with my questions? Don't you know the answers? Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. Do you think it would help? It would help ME. :-) Do you think it would help stop BPL? It wouldn't be done unless BPL was a fait accompli. I think it is. Sounds like a "yes" to me. Would you advise the rest of us to refer to Chairman Powell that way? How about we all make up derisive nicknames for the various commissioners and other regulators? Is that the professional thing to do? I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. I must have missed that in your comments. Did it help stop BPL? My telling the truth in here hasn't stopped you one bit. :-) What truth? I take it you aren't concerned about Access BPL? You feel NO danger of it polluting HF in the near future? I'm very concerned. But so far, the only advice on how to fight it that you have given is for me to make up insulting nicknames for FCC personnel. Somehow I think that's night the right approach. You should. All radio amateurs should. Why are *you* so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. Now if you've READ the NTIA reports, READ the reports of the Cedar Rapids group on measured RF interference, you SHOULD be concerned. Be very concerned! I am. But concern alone doesn't change anything. But, no, your only "concern" is trying to have weak verbal fisticuffs in here, trying to "assert" yourself by talking down to others... Tsk. Not me, Len. That's your role here. Referring to others as "feldwebel" and "idiot" and such. The only perceivable way to fight BPL is now after-the-fact, like the Cedar Rapids group did, apparently successfully. But, that takes a concerted group effort in each amateur radio locality. ARRL can't be dependent as the "big gun" to fight BPL. But they *can* give needed help, and act to coordinate efforts. And if nothing else, ARRL has continued to publicize the BPL threat both inside and outside the amateur community, and to spread accurate information on what is going on. What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? Just some simple facts, Len. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The FIRST league "reports" were only computer simulations. That's all that was available at the time. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? It took some months before they could hire a professional instrumentation service to get first-hand data on the REAL RF radiation. There were also on-site observations made by W1RFI and others. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Money for the ARRL hired service came out of the league's budget. There was NO money reported spent by the Cedar Rapids amateur group. Is money spent the only measure for you? The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. Neither are you. Childish response. Tsk. Infantile statement by you. Tsk.tsk ;-) Why are you objecting by doing such childish commentary? Why are you avoiding simple, direct questions? Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The only rational answer is that you really don't know much about BPL and/or want it to come in to everyone's urban residences....and radios. Nope. I'm simply looking for effective ways to fight it. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. I think it really bothers you that ARRL is playing any role at all in it. You ever meet Ed Hare, W1RFI, or see his presentation? Doesn't bother me at all. :-) I think it does. It DOES bother the heck out of you, though, because you bristle and get most hostile at the slightest negativism of your beloved leadue! Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? I don't know. But both the Iowa group and the affected amateur thanked them. See? One little harmless NON-praise of ARRL and you get hostile. Tsk. Nope. Identify that "help." Why? So everyone one know what the Great ARRL can do! :-) Do you think they would have thanked ARRL for no help? I don't know what "they think." Telepathy not an attribute here. But, you try with the leading, hostile question again! :-) The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? I read their reports. Plural. Several Comments. Detailed data on their measurements, procedures, instrument descriptions, photos, drawings. Good stuff! Shows they know what they were doing. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Why would they thank ARRL if they "WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES." They TOOK ACTION. Nobody denies that. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? Did you? They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. They experienced demonstrable interference from BPL. What do you suggest others do? Why do you need ACTION spelled out? It's OBVIOUS. You don't have any ideas, do you? Obvious to all but those self-elect guru extras who sit in here and try to pick fights with others because they sound warnings and wave flags. :-) IOW, you don't know either. They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? I'm not. I'm simply asking some questions. You haven't provided answers. No, you are NOT "simply asking some questions." :-) Yes I am. You are deliberately asking leading questions with hostile intent. No answers, huh? You just want to ARGUE...then try to wear others down in sheer length of "replies." :-) Not me. I don;t have the time. I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. How long ago was that? Did it involve HF interference elimination? A year and a half ago. Yes, it did. Where? Sunnuvagun!!! :-) Son of something else ;-) ;-) Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? I'm not making any judgements nor waving any fingers, Len. I'm just asking questions. Nope. You are provoking arguments for the sake of your love of arguments. :-) Not me. And I have done a few things. Probably more than you. How do you KNOW? Were you THERE? Did you help? Yep. Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? What *are* you talking about, Len? Tsk. All those many words and "answers" on aerospace and you pretend "not understanding?!?" Tsk. I don't pretend. Describe to us your professional experience in aerospace. Give us a baseline of your judgement on space matters through actual space work performed. Why? Has nothing to do with BPL. Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Doesn't matter. If something interferes with licensed radio services, FCC has regulatory power. But only to removal of the interfering source. That's all I ask. So far, all the FCC has done about ordinary, pre-BPL electric power line RF interference has been a lot of letters. Of paper. Incomplete "regulation." None of them ever got fixed? ARINC reported it still has RF interference to one of its HF receiving sites. That's in their Comments. FCC hasn't exercised any "regulatory power" on clearing that up yet. Maybe a professional like you could get it fixed. Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] Nope. Doesn't work that way. Because the internet information can cross state boundaries, FCC has authority. Tsk, tsk. Best you go read that Telecommunications Act of 1996... You may have been admitted to a bar, but you haven't been admitted to a Bar Association. Have you? Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" Nope. Are you? Tsk. Jimmie can't take the slightest negativism. :-) Who is "Jimmie"? IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. Like the APX-6. Converted by hams for use on 1296 MHz. To borrow something from Weiner von Brawn, your buddy in space - BWAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!! Jimmie, don't bother with WW2 surplus. Get with present-day transponders. Radar transponders. "Mode 4." What a "KIR" and "KIT" are. [military] What's an "ATCRBS?" Why the three pulses in transponders with the middle one at varying levels? Why use two pulses? Go get some REAL transponder info, stuff that is used NOW, not before you were born. Why? Try Teledyne Electronics, Newbury Park, CA. My employer for a while. Made nothing but military radar transponders there. Tsk. That's nice. Has nothing to do with BPL. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. Actually, it's an acronym. Sort of. CONTRACTION. Don't try to give birth to something new... Acronym. This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. Yes, it is. Jimmie dropped into "nyah-nyah mode" again. He needs to trim up his coincidence detector, he be triggering on "fruit." :-) Are you a fruit, Len? Or a vegetable? The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. I could have told you that a year ago, Len. What's with all the shouting? Tsk. "You could have told a year ago!" Well, why didn't you? I did. You argued about it then. How about two years ago? Three? Ten? Did you keep informed on the Norwegian-Swedish PLC trials? The potential was THERE. Did you keep informed on the following European PLC trials? In the UK? Why should I? All of them were shut down, weren't they? Why didn't *you* talk about them? I doubt it. You are as informed on Access BPL as you pretend to be about the aerospace business. I don't pretend. "Maybies" don't cut it. Many highly-touted new technologies have fallen by the wayside once their disadvantages became known. Yeah, like telephones, radio, heavier-than-air craft, television and [ta-dahh] cellular telephony and the Internet! Right. All "big disadvantaged things" that nobody "needs." Beta VCRs, the Iridium system, "quadraphonic" sound, 8 track tapes, old-format laser discs.... Heck, technology changes so fast these days that the IRS considers a computer fully depreciated in just 3 years. Tsk, tsk, tsk. I could have told you that in 1974 after the IRS audited my tax return for 1973 on my HP-35 scientific calculator. 3-year- depreciation. Nothing new. :-) What's your point? At time now, one in three Americans has a cell phone subscription and one out of five American households have some form of Internet access. According to the U.S. Census Bureau. But, what do they know, right? What is the significance of those facts, Len? Neither has anything to do with BPL or amateur radio. What is the significance of your mighty verbose output on AEROSPACE and national economy and the presidential elections in an amateur radio policy newsgroup? "You can not answer a question with another question" - Leonard H. Anderson. Don't act childish or churlish with those attempts at leading questions. Google has it all archived. BPL *will* hit all amateurs, all SWLs, all CBers, all other radio services using HF right in the antenna port if they try to receive close to a BPL line. The test sites have already been measured to do that. Measured by whom? There's also the economic angle. The price of DSL keeps dropping, as does Wi-Fi, while the areas covered by those technologies and cable keep expanding. If BPL cannot compete in price and performance, it's all over. "Price of DSL keeps dropping?!?!?" Look again. I did. My local providers have reduced the price of DSL repeatedly. It's getting so that I'm seriously considering changing to DSL as part of a bundled package of cell, POTS and internet access. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Simple. If BPL can't compete in the marketplace, it won't last. Who are the Wi-Fi (really Wi-FAX) providers? IEEE 802.16 standard is hardly dry in its approved specifications for Wi-FAX and you are thinking it is all over the USA? Not at all. But it's in many locations and growing fast. No interference problems like BPL. Complete portability. But hey, what do I know? Ask WK3C, Carl Stevenson. He's much more knowledgeable about that stuff than I. Tsk. I thought, indeed many thought, you knew MORE than anyone. You were wrong. In error. Carl is an IEEE member. So am I. So what. Yep. ;-) WE can both access information on IEEE standards...as you can, if you try. You are NOT an IEEE member despite being a professional. That's nice. Will is stop BPL? But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" :-) IEEE isn't advocating for BPL. Just the opposite. Yet they haven't stopped it, have they? Has IEEE done any measurements or helped in test cases like Cedar Rapids? You want to oppose the IEEE's objections because your poor little newsgroup pride is "hurt?" Nope. I welcome all help in fighting the BPL menace. Even yours - but you don't offer any. Awwww.... You are avoiding the issues by trying to hide. Not at all, Len. I'm right here. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Access BPL radiates incidental RF radiation NOW in HF and some at low-VHF. By test. By measurements of both government and private industry groups. Interesting that you don't mention ARRL's measurements and observations. Did you see the videos? Did you see over a thousand comments on docket 04-37? Yes. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Did you see the full Cedar Rapids amateur group comment and report on their Cedar Rapids BPL interference measurements/ Yes Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? I don't think so. All you want to do is "praise the league and pass all the mighty notion." :-) Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Say goodbye to low-level HF signals if BPL comes to your QTH, at least for a while. Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why does that bother you, Len? Why are you so antagonistic at anyone pointing out flaws with the ARRL? Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Do you want to spend your BPL objection time watching league videos and play-acting at being an RFI guru? What have *you* done, Len, besides make up nicknames for government officials? Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? I'm not hiding from anything. Sure you are. You'd rather be in here ARGUING for the sake of arguing and trying to wear others down with your lengthy posts. :-) Not me. Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. Must have interfered with lutefisk production. Tsk, tsk, tsk. Ethnic slurs and insults? Just a bit of humor, Len. From the double-degreed ivy-trimmed wonder of the amateur world? No. There was no reported "interference" with whitefish treatments. Both Norway and Sweden trials showed considerable SWL interference. In case you wondered, Europe actually uses SW BC for listening. [not for treating fish with lye] I use it too. SWBC, that is, not lye-treated fish. The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. Yep - even though none of the test sites are truly rural. Note that the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan gave is VEC testing and 10 year amateur licenses. What has that to do with a BPL Pilot Project in Cedar Rapids in 2003-2004? Answer: Not a thing. Wrong answer. The Republican administration of George Bush (the elder) gave us medical waivers for code tests, the no-code-test Technician license, and set in motion the end of the maritime Morse requirements. Poor baby. More with misdirection into presidential and party politics. Wrong answer. Tsk, tsk, tsk. The Maritime World was already dropping manual telegraphy by 1990 and had begun earlier than that. The BPL test in Cedar Rapids doesn't have a thing to do with "medical waivers," "code tests," or Technician class licenses, or "setting much in motion" except showing that BPL is BAD for HF. Yes, they do. The Republican administration of "now" supported the revision of treaty part S25.5 to eliminate the requirement for Morse code testing, thereby clearing the path for the elimination of all code testing in the USA. The pattern is set: Republican administrations seek less regulation of radio, even to the point of allowing spectrum pollution by BPL. There was also the "deregulation" of broadcast owners I recall someone here saying the FCC was the "expert agency" composed of "professional regulators" who had looked at the arguments and "made the right choice". Or words to that effect, anyway. Now you tell me the FCC doesn't knwo what they're doing? See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. I don't think you'd talk to them that way in person. I KNOW I would, Jimmie. No problem to me. YOU do NOT know what I do, can do, have done...you won't listen or acknowledge. Tsk. All I've seen from you are voluminous comments, posts in newsgroups, and name calling. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Not at all. Poor baby. Can't understand that BPL is going to be an RF polluter of HF and low-VHF frequencies. Wants to argue for the sake of argument. Tsk. Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? Not me. I'm not the one yelling and screaming and calling people names. They you go and chastise Steve Robeson. Why? HE yells and screams and curses and calls other people names. Just like you. |
Guys...
Can you PLEASE be a little less lazy about your editing?? The vast majority of people aren't going to read you stuff if they have to wade through mess like that below; it's a swamp. If we want to follow the whole conversation, we can follow the thread. In the mean time, please cut out everything except that to which you are specifically responding. It really isn't hard at all. Thanks. N2EY wrote: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , PAMNO (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. FCC has the authority to shut down a source of interference. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Or if it causes harmful interference. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Only with FCC approval. FCC also regulates communications by "wire" as well as radio. That's why a "56K" modem can't go quite that fast. Nope. No "FCC approval" required as long as Access BPL doesn't have incidental RF radiation beyond Commission regulations. You best reread the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Why? All the FCC can do is put limits on the incidental RF radiation from a BPL system, then enforce it. It would be a simple matter for FCC to set the levels so low that none of the systems could come close to meeting it. That would effectively ban it. But FCC won't do that. Yet. FCC doesn't come even close to the German levels already established. Not yet. But, if FCC were of a mind to, they could set Part 15 levels even lower than the German levels. Or rule that BPL systems require certification before entering operation. Not with MIKEY Powerll as Chief Commissioner or MIKEY Gallagher as the NTIA acting secretary. Two toadies for the prez for the price of one! So you agree! The FCC has the power, they just won't use it with the current people in place there. Even so, the FCC CANNOT STOP Access BPL. Do you under- stand your own error? There's no error. FCC has the authority - if they chose to use it. They haven't. As long as an Access BPL provider doesn't radiate incidental RF beyond Commission regulations, the FCC CANNOT DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT. They can lower the regulatory limit. They can write new regulations, saying that existing Part 15 rules were meant for point-source radiators like computer monitors, not distributed systems like BPL. You still don't understand just who approves or disapproves a provider. You still ignore the role fo FCC in nonradio communications. Access BPL can, and already does, by rather obvious examples, ALREADY EXCEED REGULATORY STANDARDS on incidental RF radiation levels. There's no reason to shout, Len. "Shout?" Yes, shout. As in using all capitals. Doing so doesn't make your words more true. Your eyes are too sensitive to opposition. Turn down your display brightness or wear shades. [wear shades and no one will recognize you in here? hi, hi. :-) ] We'd all recognize you, Len, even though you've tried to hide before. Read the NTIA Phase 1 and Phase 2 reports. Why? To LEARN something. What? The FCC already does that with other communications service providers (cable TV in main but also telephone cable and incidental RF radiation from electric power lines). The enforcement is going to be a total bitch of a job for BPL. The FCC is way, way down on facilities to test and measure BPL installations and is going to have to really pork up its budget to come close to good measurements in urban areas especially. It will be a HUGE task. If it gets done. It probably won't. FCC is not bound by any strict deadlines for enforcement. Well, what are you going to DO about it? What can a mere amateur like me do about it? The professionals keep saying BPL is a good thing, needed for homeland security, creates jobs, etc. I filed comments on the NOI but it apparently made no difference. Both the FCC Chairman and Our President say we need BPL. Our President has left it up to NTIA to solve any interference issues. Then why are you blaming others who HAVE DONE SOMETHING because you feel inadequate? I'm not blaming anybody. I'm simply asking a simple question and stating some facts. That's irrational. It is? How? What counterarguments can I offer that will change all their minds? Besides - you keepo telling me that FCC can't stop BPL anyway. I don't "keepo" anything. :-) Get creative. Don't sit around like a self-made guru and font of knowledge without any spritzer. We can't help your feelings of inadequacy... In other words, you don't know what to do either. So you lash out at me for asking the question. Just sit there and send messages on a broadband provider talking all about "CW getting through when nothing else does?" I've never said that, Len. No? Not even once? :-) Nope. Now, I have said things like: "sometimes, CW gets through when other available modes do not" which is an absolutely true statement. And all I have is a dialup connection. Now, now...you've said many, many times you "know' what FCC will do! ?? How does that follow from having a dialup connection? You pretend to be an "insider" with all that "knowledge." :-) Not me. The incidental RF radiation from overhead electric power lines is going to affect ANYONE trying to listen on HF and some low-VHF frequencies. Have you actually heard any of it? Only recordings. Recordings made by whom? Supplied to you how? I HAVE heard plenty of random garbage from HV corona, neon signs, arc welders, low-power RF bulbs now all the sales rage in do-it-yourself stores to "cut down on electricity consumption." None of them are BPL. And why are you so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. I am a radio professional. Really? I thought you were retired. Professionals GET concerned. Usually, only when there is money involved. Money for them. The UPLC folks are all professionals. There's no good signs evident that the FCC is coming even close to realizing the gargantuan task of monitoring BPL of the future. Mikey Powell and company have been sold on BPL "for the masses" and that's that...a big mass. Would you refer to Chairman Powell as "Mikey" to his face? Would you address your comments to FCC to "Mikey"? Someone die and you were appointed New Headmaster? No. Did someone appoint you to that position? Never claimed to. :-) You just act that way. YOU are the one trying to ask leading questions. What's the problem with my questions? Don't you know the answers? Hell, yes, I would refer to FCC Chairman Powell as "Mikey" right to his face...if I was commenting on the idiotic decisions to abandon all existing radio services and government radio services to the RF noise pollution of Access BPL. Do you think it would help? It would help ME. :-) Do you think it would help stop BPL? It wouldn't be done unless BPL was a fait accompli. I think it is. Sounds like a "yes" to me. Would you advise the rest of us to refer to Chairman Powell that way? How about we all make up derisive nicknames for the various commissioners and other regulators? Is that the professional thing to do? I've ALREADY addressed the ENTIRE COMMISSION as ignorant on technical matters. They are. QED. Quod erat demonstrandum. [it is as demonstrated] That's in public view, on the record. I must have missed that in your comments. Did it help stop BPL? My telling the truth in here hasn't stopped you one bit. :-) What truth? I take it you aren't concerned about Access BPL? You feel NO danger of it polluting HF in the near future? I'm very concerned. But so far, the only advice on how to fight it that you have given is for me to make up insulting nicknames for FCC personnel. Somehow I think that's night the right approach. You should. All radio amateurs should. Why are *you* so concerned? You're not a radio amateur. Now if you've READ the NTIA reports, READ the reports of the Cedar Rapids group on measured RF interference, you SHOULD be concerned. Be very concerned! I am. But concern alone doesn't change anything. But, no, your only "concern" is trying to have weak verbal fisticuffs in here, trying to "assert" yourself by talking down to others... Tsk. Not me, Len. That's your role here. Referring to others as "feldwebel" and "idiot" and such. The only perceivable way to fight BPL is now after-the-fact, like the Cedar Rapids group did, apparently successfully. But, that takes a concerted group effort in each amateur radio locality. ARRL can't be dependent as the "big gun" to fight BPL. But they *can* give needed help, and act to coordinate efforts. And if nothing else, ARRL has continued to publicize the BPL threat both inside and outside the amateur community, and to spread accurate information on what is going on. What is that statement you make...another Sermon on the Antenna Mount? Just some simple facts, Len. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The FIRST league "reports" were only computer simulations. That's all that was available at the time. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? It took some months before they could hire a professional instrumentation service to get first-hand data on the REAL RF radiation. There were also on-site observations made by W1RFI and others. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Money for the ARRL hired service came out of the league's budget. There was NO money reported spent by the Cedar Rapids amateur group. Is money spent the only measure for you? The ARRL is NOT the major objector to Access BPL. Neither are you. Childish response. Tsk. Infantile statement by you. Tsk.tsk ;-) Why are you objecting by doing such childish commentary? Why are you avoiding simple, direct questions? Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The only rational answer is that you really don't know much about BPL and/or want it to come in to everyone's urban residences....and radios. Nope. I'm simply looking for effective ways to fight it. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? You could see that from the comments on dockets 04-37 or 03-104. But, you can't see that and continue with the "praise the league" as if they were the only group against BPL. I think it really bothers you that ARRL is playing any role at all in it. You ever meet Ed Hare, W1RFI, or see his presentation? Doesn't bother me at all. :-) I think it does. It DOES bother the heck out of you, though, because you bristle and get most hostile at the slightest negativism of your beloved leadue! Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? The Iowa group and the affected amateur both publicly thanked ARRL for its help. What "help" did the ARRL do in Cedar Rapids, Iowa? I don't know. But both the Iowa group and the affected amateur thanked them. See? One little harmless NON-praise of ARRL and you get hostile. Tsk. Nope. Identify that "help." Why? So everyone one know what the Great ARRL can do! :-) Do you think they would have thanked ARRL for no help? I don't know what "they think." Telepathy not an attribute here. But, you try with the leading, hostile question again! :-) The Cedar Rapids group WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? I read their reports. Plural. Several Comments. Detailed data on their measurements, procedures, instrument descriptions, photos, drawings. Good stuff! Shows they know what they were doing. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Why would they thank ARRL if they "WENT OUT AND DID IT BY THEMSELVES." They TOOK ACTION. Nobody denies that. How do you know? Were you there? Did you help them? Did you? They didn't go around mumbling catechisms for the league and do nothing. THEY DID SOMETHING. They experienced demonstrable interference from BPL. What do you suggest others do? Why do you need ACTION spelled out? It's OBVIOUS. You don't have any ideas, do you? Obvious to all but those self-elect guru extras who sit in here and try to pick fights with others because they sound warnings and wave flags. :-) IOW, you don't know either. They aren't staffed or budgeted to oversee all the possible BPL installation testing in the USA. The League's budget would have to quadruple or quintuple to approach being able to do that...and still not be enough. How do you know what it would take, Len? Have you done it? Have you sent a check to help out? Why are you trying to start a Flame War on this? I'm not. I'm simply asking some questions. You haven't provided answers. No, you are NOT "simply asking some questions." :-) Yes I am. You are deliberately asking leading questions with hostile intent. No answers, huh? You just want to ARGUE...then try to wear others down in sheer length of "replies." :-) Not me. I don;t have the time. I CAN do a fair estimation of man-hours because I've done fair estimations of man-hours and effort on lots of contract proposals in the past. How long ago was that? Did it involve HF interference elimination? A year and a half ago. Yes, it did. Where? Sunnuvagun!!! :-) Son of something else ;-) ;-) Just what has the judgemental, finger-waving James Miccolis DONE against Access BPL? I'm not making any judgements nor waving any fingers, Len. I'm just asking questions. Nope. You are provoking arguments for the sake of your love of arguments. :-) Not me. And I have done a few things. Probably more than you. How do you KNOW? Were you THERE? Did you help? Yep. Besides sit in here and wag a disapproving finger and play space guru games in words with Weiner von Brawn?!? What *are* you talking about, Len? Tsk. All those many words and "answers" on aerospace and you pretend "not understanding?!?" Tsk. I don't pretend. Describe to us your professional experience in aerospace. Give us a baseline of your judgement on space matters through actual space work performed. Why? Has nothing to do with BPL. Individual industry and local government (state on down) groups haven't shown they have enough clout to make a difference in the Commission's enthusiasm for BPL. Regulation of radio is specifically a Federal function. State and local governments cannot have any real clout - otherwise they'd be requiring licenses and fees. Clue: Access BPL is NOT a "radio service." Doesn't matter. If something interferes with licensed radio services, FCC has regulatory power. But only to removal of the interfering source. That's all I ask. So far, all the FCC has done about ordinary, pre-BPL electric power line RF interference has been a lot of letters. Of paper. Incomplete "regulation." None of them ever got fixed? ARINC reported it still has RF interference to one of its HF receiving sites. That's in their Comments. FCC hasn't exercised any "regulatory power" on clearing that up yet. Maybe a professional like you could get it fixed. Access BPL has INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION that is "not intentioned to transmit any radio frequency information." Access BPL is a broadband communications carrier. As such it might be - at some future time - under FCC control IF IT CROSSES STATE BOUNDARIES in providing such a communication service. [the telephone infrastructure already crosses state boundaries by default since the communications capabilities are so built-in] Nope. Doesn't work that way. Because the internet information can cross state boundaries, FCC has authority. Tsk, tsk. Best you go read that Telecommunications Act of 1996... You may have been admitted to a bar, but you haven't been admitted to a Bar Association. Have you? Pandora's Box has already been opened. Lots of such Boxes in all of the 50 states. It's going to be one helluva big task to close them. Maybe. Or maybe a few good precedents will be set that will cause the rest to give up. Are you going to break into a rendition of "Tommorrow" from the musical "Little Orphan Annie?" Nope. Are you? Tsk. Jimmie can't take the slightest negativism. :-) Who is "Jimmie"? IFF is the old acronym for radar transponders. Like the APX-6. Converted by hams for use on 1296 MHz. To borrow something from Weiner von Brawn, your buddy in space - BWAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!! Jimmie, don't bother with WW2 surplus. Get with present-day transponders. Radar transponders. "Mode 4." What a "KIR" and "KIT" are. [military] What's an "ATCRBS?" Why the three pulses in transponders with the middle one at varying levels? Why use two pulses? Go get some REAL transponder info, stuff that is used NOW, not before you were born. Why? Try Teledyne Electronics, Newbury Park, CA. My employer for a while. Made nothing but military radar transponders there. Tsk. That's nice. Has nothing to do with BPL. IFF is also an older contraction in English meaning I, and only IF. Actually, it's an acronym. Sort of. CONTRACTION. Don't try to give birth to something new... Acronym. This isn't the former nor the latter and your wish fulfillment hasn't yet been filled. Yes, it is. Jimmie dropped into "nyah-nyah mode" again. He needs to trim up his coincidence detector, he be triggering on "fruit." :-) Are you a fruit, Len? Or a vegetable? The EXISTING ACCESS BPL SYSTEM *ARE* RADIATING EXCESS RF ENERGY ON HF in every community that is trying it out. I could have told you that a year ago, Len. What's with all the shouting? Tsk. "You could have told a year ago!" Well, why didn't you? I did. You argued about it then. How about two years ago? Three? Ten? Did you keep informed on the Norwegian-Swedish PLC trials? The potential was THERE. Did you keep informed on the following European PLC trials? In the UK? Why should I? All of them were shut down, weren't they? Why didn't *you* talk about them? I doubt it. You are as informed on Access BPL as you pretend to be about the aerospace business. I don't pretend. "Maybies" don't cut it. Many highly-touted new technologies have fallen by the wayside once their disadvantages became known. Yeah, like telephones, radio, heavier-than-air craft, television and [ta-dahh] cellular telephony and the Internet! Right. All "big disadvantaged things" that nobody "needs." Beta VCRs, the Iridium system, "quadraphonic" sound, 8 track tapes, old-format laser discs.... Heck, technology changes so fast these days that the IRS considers a computer fully depreciated in just 3 years. Tsk, tsk, tsk. I could have told you that in 1974 after the IRS audited my tax return for 1973 on my HP-35 scientific calculator. 3-year- depreciation. Nothing new. :-) What's your point? At time now, one in three Americans has a cell phone subscription and one out of five American households have some form of Internet access. According to the U.S. Census Bureau. But, what do they know, right? What is the significance of those facts, Len? Neither has anything to do with BPL or amateur radio. What is the significance of your mighty verbose output on AEROSPACE and national economy and the presidential elections in an amateur radio policy newsgroup? "You can not answer a question with another question" - Leonard H. Anderson. Don't act childish or churlish with those attempts at leading questions. Google has it all archived. BPL *will* hit all amateurs, all SWLs, all CBers, all other radio services using HF right in the antenna port if they try to receive close to a BPL line. The test sites have already been measured to do that. Measured by whom? There's also the economic angle. The price of DSL keeps dropping, as does Wi-Fi, while the areas covered by those technologies and cable keep expanding. If BPL cannot compete in price and performance, it's all over. "Price of DSL keeps dropping?!?!?" Look again. I did. My local providers have reduced the price of DSL repeatedly. It's getting so that I'm seriously considering changing to DSL as part of a bundled package of cell, POTS and internet access. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Simple. If BPL can't compete in the marketplace, it won't last. Who are the Wi-Fi (really Wi-FAX) providers? IEEE 802.16 standard is hardly dry in its approved specifications for Wi-FAX and you are thinking it is all over the USA? Not at all. But it's in many locations and growing fast. No interference problems like BPL. Complete portability. But hey, what do I know? Ask WK3C, Carl Stevenson. He's much more knowledgeable about that stuff than I. Tsk. I thought, indeed many thought, you knew MORE than anyone. You were wrong. In error. Carl is an IEEE member. So am I. So what. Yep. ;-) WE can both access information on IEEE standards...as you can, if you try. You are NOT an IEEE member despite being a professional. That's nice. Will is stop BPL? But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" :-) IEEE isn't advocating for BPL. Just the opposite. Yet they haven't stopped it, have they? Has IEEE done any measurements or helped in test cases like Cedar Rapids? You want to oppose the IEEE's objections because your poor little newsgroup pride is "hurt?" Nope. I welcome all help in fighting the BPL menace. Even yours - but you don't offer any. Awwww.... You are avoiding the issues by trying to hide. Not at all, Len. I'm right here. But, "what has that to do with BPL or amateur radio?" Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Access BPL radiates incidental RF radiation NOW in HF and some at low-VHF. By test. By measurements of both government and private industry groups. Interesting that you don't mention ARRL's measurements and observations. Did you see the videos? Did you see over a thousand comments on docket 04-37? Yes. Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Did you see the full Cedar Rapids amateur group comment and report on their Cedar Rapids BPL interference measurements/ Yes Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? I don't think so. All you want to do is "praise the league and pass all the mighty notion." :-) Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Say goodbye to low-level HF signals if BPL comes to your QTH, at least for a while. Depends on the frequencies used. Not all BPL systems use the entire HF spectrum. See ARRL descriptions of the Penn Yan (NY) system. NONE of the Access BPL systems use the "entire HF spectrum." Only MOST of it. Enough to cream any low-level received signals in pseudo-random noise. Why does that bother you, Len? Why are you so antagonistic at anyone pointing out flaws with the ARRL? Would you rather that ARRL not be involved? Do you want to spend your BPL objection time watching league videos and play-acting at being an RFI guru? What have *you* done, Len, besides make up nicknames for government officials? Why are you trying to hide from the obvious RF pollution? I'm not hiding from anything. Sure you are. You'd rather be in here ARGUING for the sake of arguing and trying to wear others down with your lengthy posts. :-) Not me. Remember which administration brought out the spectre of Access BPL to this nation while you and everyone else are at it. Not just this nation. The Canadians are at it: BPL began in Norway 10 years ago, as PLC or Power Line Communications. It didn't get far then. Must have interfered with lutefisk production. Tsk, tsk, tsk. Ethnic slurs and insults? Just a bit of humor, Len. From the double-degreed ivy-trimmed wonder of the amateur world? No. There was no reported "interference" with whitefish treatments. Both Norway and Sweden trials showed considerable SWL interference. In case you wondered, Europe actually uses SW BC for listening. [not for treating fish with lye] I use it too. SWBC, that is, not lye-treated fish. The REPUBLICAN administration of NOW made broadband and broadband over power lines a "big high-tech new thing" for rural America. Yep - even though none of the test sites are truly rural. Note that the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan gave is VEC testing and 10 year amateur licenses. What has that to do with a BPL Pilot Project in Cedar Rapids in 2003-2004? Answer: Not a thing. Wrong answer. The Republican administration of George Bush (the elder) gave us medical waivers for code tests, the no-code-test Technician license, and set in motion the end of the maritime Morse requirements. Poor baby. More with misdirection into presidential and party politics. Wrong answer. Tsk, tsk, tsk. The Maritime World was already dropping manual telegraphy by 1990 and had begun earlier than that. The BPL test in Cedar Rapids doesn't have a thing to do with "medical waivers," "code tests," or Technician class licenses, or "setting much in motion" except showing that BPL is BAD for HF. Yes, they do. The Republican administration of "now" supported the revision of treaty part S25.5 to eliminate the requirement for Morse code testing, thereby clearing the path for the elimination of all code testing in the USA. The pattern is set: Republican administrations seek less regulation of radio, even to the point of allowing spectrum pollution by BPL. There was also the "deregulation" of broadcast owners I recall someone here saying the FCC was the "expert agency" composed of "professional regulators" who had looked at the arguments and "made the right choice". Or words to that effect, anyway. Now you tell me the FCC doesn't knwo what they're doing? See MIKEY Powell's enthusiastic support in public. See MIKEY Gallagher's enthusiastic support in public [NTIA]. I don't think you'd talk to them that way in person. I KNOW I would, Jimmie. No problem to me. YOU do NOT know what I do, can do, have done...you won't listen or acknowledge. Tsk. All I've seen from you are voluminous comments, posts in newsgroups, and name calling. Do you need pop-ups on your browser screen to understand the toadying to the prez going on? Nationwide billboards (like Wall Drug Store) to advertise it? Not at all. Poor baby. Can't understand that BPL is going to be an RF polluter of HF and low-VHF frequencies. Wants to argue for the sake of argument. Tsk. Or are you just trying to incite another newsgroup flame war? Not me. I'm not the one yelling and screaming and calling people names. They you go and chastise Steve Robeson. Why? HE yells and screams and curses and calls other people names. Just like you. |
In article , David Stinson
writes: Guys... Can you PLEASE be a little less lazy about your editing?? Roger that. Abbreviate. Trim. Polish. Edit. Publish. Hihi. LHA |
In article , PAMNO
(N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: In article , (N2EY) writes: In article , (Len Over 21) writes: Oddly enough, despite the urban myth of some objecting to BPL, the FCC does NOT have any power to stop Access BPL! Actually, they do. NO, they don't have ANY ability to STOP any Access BPL. Yes, they do. FCC has the authority to shut down a source of interference. All the FCC can do - at the moment and in what they will probably have on a new R&O - is the ability to stop INCIDENTAL RF RADIATION beyond the level established by the Commission. Or if it causes harmful interference. The broadband communications service over Access BPL can CONTINUE in the USA. Only with FCC approval. FCC also regulates communications by "wire" as well as radio. That's why a "56K" modem can't go quite that fast. Nope. No "FCC approval" required as long as Access BPL doesn't have incidental RF radiation beyond Commission regulations. You best reread the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Why? For one thing, you MIGHT learn something new. :-) Just think...you could then be the Informed Guru preaching to the masses in r.r.a.p. all about how they should act, do, perform, etc. But...all you really seem to want to do in here is do lengthy arguments for the sake of arguments' sake. :-) Sorry, Jimmie, but you are wasting lots of folks' time... Now go back to orbit and tell us all about SPACE and your intimate knowledge of the aerospace industry, etc. That's a regular feature in here and your sidekicks don't want to miss a single minute of it... Good luck on your new job as a traveling salesman. |
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