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K4YZ wrote:
Jayson Davis wrote: As soon as cw falls, I see the most important step being in "advertising" the fact that cw is no longer a requirement. Spreading the word and helping others to study and pass the written exam will be key in getting the numbers we need at that time. I don't even see that as being a "happening thing", Jayson. Amateur Radio, just like fishing, or NASCAR, or R/C models, etc etc has always attracted a certain "crowd". And a strange line of thought Jayson uses. Kind of like we're supposed to say: "Ham Radio - we don't suck now!" It's not an issue of numbers, it's an issue of why would anyone want to become an amateur radio operator. Really now, why would you want to do that? To talk on repeaters? To work some guy on 20 meters? The whole hobby is passe. To Jayson: Then why the heck do you want us to advertise that the Morse test is gone. I wonder why so many people who hate Ham radio seem to know exactly how Ham radio is supposed to be? So's dropping a line in the water and trying to hook a fish, but millions of folks do it every year...Not because it's the only way to feed their families, but just for fun. Anyone can get into chat rooms or exchange e-mail with folks almost anywhere in the world...but there will still be the thrill of doing it with "wireless". If you want to attract the bright intelligent minds, you better be prepared to challenge them. Challenge them to let them in, challenge them when they get here. Do you think ax.25 is going to attract people? To Jayson again: (Sorry Steve, I didn't see the post until now) Question number 1 - Why do so many people seem to think that the internet is some kind of Hi-Tech wonderland - and that Amateur Radio darn well better emulate it? Side note..... If you think that the Internet is at the cutting edge.... well, we know that you aren't. And yes, mentioning AX. 25 is telling me that. Packet radio is FAIAP not at all about transmission of large amounts of data. It has morphed into APRS, GPS apps, C and C and other areas which do indeed attract bright people who want to experiment. BTW, isn't there a slight contradiction between wanting to attract large number of people, and wanting to attract the bright and intelligent? I suspect it might sound snobbish, but it *is* true that 50 percent of people are below average. Gospel truth! Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeelllp....Markie wil chime in here and say I am "attacking" Lennie, but there's been a no code license for just that very kind of experimentation for 14 years now, and Lennie and hi ilk have been more than welcome to jump right in and develop all the new data protocols they'd like to do. Yet all they whine about is the code test and that 3% of the allocations that do require a code test. Why? Those type hate Hams. Maybe that isn't gospel truth, but its close enough. Because all THEY are interested in is playing on HF...If all those engineering types had any interest in obtaining an Amateur Radio license for "experimenting" purposes, it would be a done deal. Yup. - Mike KB3EIA - |