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Ashley VK3HAG wrote:
N9OGL, Helo Ashley, Instead of wasting your time, effort & money on a pirate TV station, fighting the FCC (our ACA isn't much better btw) why not volunteer your time and expertise to the local community radio and television stations as I do? Not only could you broadcast what you want, you could help save the community station thousands of dollars by carrying out free maintained and repairs. I leave my broadcasting to broadcast services and amateur to amateur. Our community has one FM broadcast station and no television station. The local station will not allow you go in and run a show on their station. My group in the 90's tried starting a low power tv station for the purpose of allowing people in the community to use it. unlike someone (K4YZ) who thinks it's all about me. We also have a "Public Access" channel unfortunately the cable company has complete control over it. (something they are not allowed to do) My group has tried repeatively to get programs on the public access channel (including programs from the University of Illinois and the University of Chicago) but the cable company refuses to allow us access to the channel. We complain to the city and the cable comes back say Oh we will give you access but lets wait for a few months and we will call you. when the few months are up the proccess starts all over again. And two questions for US ppl on he 1) Why does the cable channel control community television? In Melbourne UHF Ch 31 is community tv, and is run by Melbourne's Uni's as an independent organisation. Public Access channels are created through the franchise agreement. Cable companies are not allowed to have any editorial control over the channel. However, there are some cable companies and in some places local governments who censor and "control" the access channel. 2) Why does the ARRL handbook list cable channels on your free-to-air tv bandplan. Yes, we have cable tv, but our system is ABC 2 (VK's BBC), HSV 7, GTV 9, ATV 10, SBS 28 & UNI 31 on the normal tv (just plug an antenna into the set and tune) plus cable via Coax (Fox only downunder). If I wanted to do a show on Channel 31, I could, what's broadcast is up to Uni's Student Union, not a tv company. Perhaps by 'time travel' N9OGL is referring to the fact that when USA hams QSOs with hams Down Under or in New Zealand you are speaking to us tommorow and we are speaking to you yesterday ![]() Technical your right there ![]() and getting on the radio and talk to a guy in Japan who was on his way to work, it was 7.00 am the next day there. The "time travel" I was talking about will be posted on my invention blog along with explainations of some of my other idea's these so-called hams bad mouth. PS N9OGL: To run even a 10% successful television, print or radio show/program/station/publication you must first learn that there is a certain 'way' of operating broadcast to amateur, the 'hype' factor I call it, but for this to be effective requires a well-spoken, educated, grammatically correct (or incorrect on purpose for desired effects, not just because you can't spell) (just watch your nightly news or listen to the radio, not the content, but how that content is presented) (Almost all media outlets use a book called a "Style Book" which maintains content and how that content is presented for all media formats in that organisation) Also, you'll need to get much better at punctuation, as punctuation is expression. If you are one of those guys who at school read mono-tone then you haven't a hope. Remember the kid that reads with expression (usually resulting in getting teased and laughed at hi hi) usually go on to be radio announcers, journalists, etc. And punctuation, grammar, spelling and expression go hand in hand. Example: (From "To Kill A Mocking Bird" by Harper Lee). With Expression: "Jem heard me. HE THRUST HIS HEAD AROUND THE CONNECTING DOOR. As he came to my bed Atticus's light flashed on. We stayed where we were until it went off; we heard him turn over and we waited until he was still again" Without: "Jem heard me. He thrust his head around the connecting door. As he came to my bed Atticus's light flashed on. We stayed where we were until it went off; we heard him turn over and we waited until he was still again" Also, I read in the posts about you 'getting upset' at the editing of the context of your program. Rather than call it 'censorship', and complain, do what any journalist worth his/her salt would do, re-word your show to still have the same impact and meaning without the profanity. You should also note, that NOT swearing is more effective THAN swearing. Example: you start your show tonight and include lot's of 'hells' 'dams' '****' etc, and people watch. Ten years down the track same thing. But, if you didn't swear for ten years at all, then one day came on air and said "This is bull****" it would be 200% more effective. Who out there knows someone who never swears? How shocked are you when "That's ####ed" come out of thier mouth, as opposed to someone who uses it as every second word. The former has such an impact as most people will interpret that as "He's really annoyed," "Whatever they did must have been pretty bad for him to use the f word. Whereas in the latter, it's just "There goes that gutter mouthed lout again" Having worked, albiet briefly, for the Herald & Weekly Times (Rupert's first company, and the one that started News Ltd & Fox) every employee is given a book which contains information on how certain articles and other issues are to be dealt with by the journalist. Example alright-those that allow this word into our media will be made to write "all right" 1000 times. (p.16, HWT Style Book, 8th Ed, 9/1990) Listen to AR newsline, an example of 'the format' "I'm Bill Pasternack W?ITF for Amateur Radio News Line" This is a post from the future.........(Sent from VK 1438hrs AEST, Thursday 31 March 2005) (UTC: 0338hrs, Thursday 31 March 2005) Looking forward to my next QSO with the past ![]() Ashley Geelan VK3HAG Australian Radio Amateur & Stand-In Volunteer Radio Announcer @ Plenty Valley FM 88.6FM Melbourne, Australia. I, too will be starting an on-air news bulletin, two in fact. One on the local community station, about amateur radio and a brief amateur bulletin for amateurs only who can call in to the studio (when I'm there) via amateur radio and go 'on air' with thier thoughts to help promote AR (instead of using the phone). This won't happen until I have co-ordinated a frequency to use with the local amateur club. Perhaps, N9OGL I could send/show you the correct way to format/run a newscast of any description. N9OGL, if you have an Echo or IRLP node nearby would you like me to connect to it and give a demonstration on this. No point having a broadcast of any description until you have the fundamentals in place-grammar, pronunciation, spelling, don't bother, it's hard enough to capture a (any) audience with these traits. I'm usually on echolink, my repeater is also tied into it. The echolink on the repeater is off by my personal station is up. Todd N9OGL "Barry OGrady" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 16:04:29 GMT, Dave Heil wrote: More of our r.r.a.p. Tom Swift, gleaned from the archives: from alt.sci.time-travel Todd Daugherty Jun 26 2003, 7:24 pm I've have this Idea for a "simple" Time Machine. A operator would set up a computer up to a high power wireless system. They would then set the computer to transmit a message say in 30 years and hope that in thirty years someone would reply back. comments? Its unlikely that your setup would still be functional 30 years from now. Todd Daugherty N9OGL Amateur Radio Operator (and) Todd Daugherty Jun 26 2003, 10:44 pm The Answer to your first question is yes. A computer hooked to a TNC (which is a wireless modem) is set up with a timing system. Most "Packet" software for wireless communication has a timer system in it. It's part of the software. Why wait so long for the signal to transmit? because you want to be able to send the signal to a time period where high speed communication systems are in general uses. The systems in use then may not be compatible. Scientist are now just experimenting with high speed communication devices. For a person to send a signal back in time they would have to uses a high speed communication devices. Just remember it is a lot easier to sent a particle or a signal through time then it is human or an object. Its impossible to send anything through time. On your second comment about time travel via the human brain. I believe not only "time-travel" is possible via the human brain but I also believe while a person is a sleep the electro-magnetic emissions of say your brain is connected to the multi-you in every parallel universe. The only time your able to view those other universes is while your Brainwaves are at the lowest point of the spectrum (around 1 to 14 hz) This also might explain NDE. No technology can overcome the fact that there is nowhere to travel to. Todd N9OGL (and) snipped Barry |
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