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From: Mike Coslo on May 29, 9:57 pm
wrote: Mike Coslo wrote: Many people lament that there is not enough interest in Ham radio by young people. Agreed - but how much would be enough? Dunno. I personally agree somewhat with Brian K's assertion that the absolute number of Hams could indeed drop without serious problems. On the other hand, I believe that we should have a good mix of ages. Younger hobbyists have to be there to "take orders" from the older ones? :-) There are often many reasons given for this deficiency, and somewhat less "fixes". One of the reasons that is given very often is that Amateur radio is in some sort of competition with the Internet. Every activity is in competition with every other. Among teen-agers? How can you possibly say that? :-) Surely. Comparisons between the two show that Amateur radio is a tad bit more involved than buying a computer, doing a dialup and surfing the net. Will a person who's idea of a hobby is clicking a mouse button find Amateur radio a tad intimidating? Tsk, tsk. Ham speak with forked tongue on inpugning "no intellect required." A sort of Deus Ex Mousina attitude. Mike, you were never into computers and BBSs before the Macintosh mouse debuted, were you? Lots and lots of ALL ages were BBSing, having a great time without the GUI, well before Windows, when not on-line they were doing programming, writing games, "unprotecting" protected disks, experimenting with the first modem advancements, etc. Budding authors were practicing writing and established writers were generating manuscripts with relative ease. Accounting people had discovered the first spreadsheets and increased the efficiency of their inventory, financial records, establishing both schedules and prices of products they were making. ALL BEFORE the advent of either the computer Mouse or GUI. To get an HF transceiver in their vehicles, both young and old could buy a set of transceiver, antenna, microphone for under $200 from Sears, K-Mart, Wall-Mart, etc. in the morning and have it installed and working in the afternoon. Of course that was "CB" and therefore "lowly" and, to some, "criminal." :-) [all before the GUI and mouse] I have to admit that putting up one's ham station DOES take some smarts. One copies an antenna design out of the ARRL Antenna Handbook, getting somewhat close to the dimensions. One can copy a whole transceiver design out of the ARRL Handbook, then rescue themselves by scrapping the unworking project with a ready-built transceiver bought at HRO (reviews of performance presented by the "ARRL Lab" and published in QST). They can even buy coax cable assemblies when they are unable to put on PL-259s right, even buy whole antenna kits. I'd say that was "plug and play" on the same order as PCs, but before Microsith came out with that marketing/sales phrase. :-) A computer has many uses, from being a glorified typewriter to a serious research/calculation device to gaming to producing all sorts of multimedia stuff. Don't forget surfing porn. A great way to build character! 8^) Tsk, Mike. You never saw "dirty pictures" elsewhere (not over a computer) when you were "building (your own) character?" :-) Most decent white-collar jobs today require computer skills. Many blue-collar jobs also require them. True enough. There aren't a lot of businesses or corporations that need "ham radio skills" (even discounting morse code). Back before the GUI and computer mousies, push-to-talk two-way radios were common in business large and small, with public safety organizations, in the military, and in government. All easy to use...and NOT on amateur bands nor needing morse code skills. Not missing a point. To me, computers are like underwear - pretty much gotta have it. I've not seen any "HANES" computer bramds in stores... Some people live in places where putting up an antenna - *any* antenna - is banned by CC&Rs. A family isn't likely to move so that Junior can put up a G5RV. Unless either of you have some NEW info courtesy of the U.S. Census Bureau, you will find the MOST residences in the USA do NOT have such restrictions. Heh! i had a thought -maybe we could get some of the rebellious types to go stealth! 8^) You haven't heard of MOBILE or even HAND-HELD transceivers?!? Actually, I think you missed my point! My point is that if a person is making a choice of hobbies to get into, the concept of choosing between Amateur radio and using a cell phone just isn't in the mix. I see trendy teens with cell phones glued to their heads every day. I can only assume that they spend hours each day on them. I can guarantee that that kid has never considered amateur radio as a hobby. How do you present this "guarantee?" In writing? From "long experience" in observation? [remember there are a few of us who've been around longer and seen MORE teeners - even been one once - have MANY DIFFERENT observations of others over the past half century] I doubt they consider their cells as a hobby either. So it is pretty hard to think of that as competition. Competition for teeners' TIME. They have the same 24 hours a day as adults and infants, the same need to sleep, eat, and do other things (such as attend school). How many TV shows and movies ever depict engineering or technical folks at all, compared to other fields like health care or law enforcement? TV shows and Movies are for ENTERTAINMENT of enough customers that will pay the Producers of same...and artists. Entertainment shows go for the Emotions of the audience. One show made a start toward a good positive presentation of engineers and techies. It was Star Trek. The original series had a very kind treatment of Scottie, the engineer. ...who ran the works of a SPACESHIP (circa 1967) as thunk up by MOVIE people, the Producers, the Writers, the scenery and prop designers. NOT "techie" insofar as our then-present society was. EMOTION stuff, NOT education. I graduated high school in 1972 - the golden age of space and technology, right? Well, pretty close to the end of it.... NOT EVEN CLOSE. Having been IN the "space business" since 1964 and working for the manufacturer of the Space Shuttle Main Engine (as well as the Apollo first-stage engine), you both missed the Space Shuttle program and well over a hundred STS missions. You've MISSED the unmanned vehicle missions and negated the tremendous data gathered by the Mars rovers and the trips to the outer edges of our solar system. You two have completely ignored when the "personal computer" made its debuts beginning in the mid-1970s, and suddenly skyrocketing after 1980. You've missed the first computer networking of BBSs that began in the late 1970s or have recognized the Internet phenomenon happening after it went public in 1991. Perhaps you've both become too blase' about computers and the Internet? My basic thesis is that we as a society are moving toward the celebration of the ordinary, the mundane. We have lost our edge. And that can only last for so long. Tsk, your own middle-age angst is mumbling. :-) I've heard the SAME sort of complaint by others about their generations' folly for about six decades. :-) If we can celebrate those who *DO* things instead of simply consume things, we might reverse that trend. That has been going on in nearly all technological endeavors for as long as I can remember. The DO-ers are celebrated. A survey of the IEEE Milestone history program in electronics demonstrates that, a program that is shared with other technological associations. The birth of the first "hard drive" has been Milestoned recently...IBM's RAMAC and the Model 350 disk storage system (1956) out of a small IBM lab in Silicon Valley. But, to be celebrated, you MUST do something that others consider more remarkable than average. Your own personal accomplishment is NOT enough. One isn't a DO-er just by making something and showing it on the Internet to a wide ranging viewing audience, then proclaiming its "greatness." Neither is one a DO-er by explaining what they "will" do and expecting plaudits BEFORE they've ever done anything. |
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