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![]() Carl R. Stevenson wrote: The concern/fear/issues being raised by many are that the ARRL "regulation by bandwidth" proposal will result in practically all of the HF CW/data bands being "over-run by Winlink/PactorIII robots," that those stations don't "play nice" with real-time human to human modes, that PactorIII takes a lot of bandwidth for a non-proportional gain in throughput, and that Winlink and PactorIII are closed, proprietary modes that are only available through the purchase of some rather expensive, sole-source hardware and software. I'd state the first part somewhat differently: One concern is that the proposed rules would/could unleash "robot" stations of all kinds anywhere in the non-voice/image parts of the bands. There would be no way for the typical PSK31, RTTY or Morse Code operator to know they were on a frequency used by a "robot" until the robot fired up on top of their QSO. A human operator who fires up on top of an existing QSO can be in violation of the rules. What gives robots an exception? PactorIII and Winlink are indeed proprietary, which goes against the grain of open-sourcing and freeware. Compare those modes to, say, PSK31, with its wide-open software and hardware. To most of us there's nothing wrong with hams using propietary software or hardware - until it becomes an endorsed standard. IOW, 'buy this particular piece of hardware and software from this particular company or you cannot play the game' doesn't sit well. There seem to be rather widely held views that "robot" stations that "don't play nice" with conventional human-human modes should be restricted to limited sub-bands because otherwise they will cause considerable interference problems, Yup. Makes sense, too. that they don't need to be able to take over huge swaths of the bands, and that closed, proprietary systems should not be "pushed" in the ham bands. (conversely, the feeling seems to be widespread that modes used in the ham bands should be "open source" - both h/w and s/w) Exactly. It is my understanding that Winlink has become the method of choice for some folks with boats to send and receive their email. This raises the question of commercial/pecuniary content as well - how are such things filtered? Add to the mix that it's ARRL pushing the Winlink/PactorIII thing and you can see the opposition rising... What's your take on such 'robots' on HF, Carl? Should they be treated just like any other station, or should they have some special restrictions based on their unattended nature? Should ARRL endorse/standardize/push modes requiring the purchase of proprietary hardware and software from specific providers? 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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