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N9OGL wrote:
The point of the argument is for amateur's radio to grow amateurs are going to have to compete with the internet. No, that not only isn't the point, there isn't any argument except in your mind. Compete in the sense of getting people into the hobby. Amateur radio competes with any other leisure activity for time. Some folks find it fascinating. Some have no interest. Not everyone is going to become a radio amateur. The old modes of communication isn't going to cut it anymore. They seem to be cutting it just fine, Todd. What new mode do you use in your clandestine "broadcasts"? The vast majority of people would rather get on the internet instead of getting into a hobby which has nothing to really offer in terms new modes of communication. The vast majority of people are never going to become hams. It has always been that way and will always be that way. Many amateur radio operators can face the fact that amateur radio is slowly falling behind in technology and thus in turn is slowly dying off. You've managed to dump a couple of false premises in one sentence. You're wrong about technology and about amateur radio dying. Amateur radio will not grow if you can't get people into the service. Amateur radio licensing numbers are near an all time high. You can drop the licensing structure down to nothing but no one will come into a hobby without dated modes of communication. I'm too busy laughing at your sentence to give you a serious reply, Todd. Dave K8MN |
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