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From: on Oct 31, 4:52 pm
Dave Heil wrote: wrote: Dave Heil wrote: RST Engineering wrote: Now, lay YOURS out on the table and see who takes a knife to it. Jim OK, from one Jim to another: Novice 1967 (age 13) Technician 1968 Advanced 1968 Extra 1970 (because of mandatory 2 year wait) 2nd Class Commercial Radiotelephone 1972 BSEE 1976 University of Pennsylvania MSEE 1992 Drexel University Coinventer US patent #5,358,202 I could go on... But not much farther. Present employer unnamed. The patent is described only as involving "vehicular technology" according to one of Miccolis' old Comments on one of the 18 Petitions. My sole-invention patent of 1974 is on RADIO. shrug That slipped my mind. Len has taken numerous shots at my Air Force service in Vietnam, though he doesn't seem to know what it is that I did there. It's not what you did there. What you didn't do in Vietnam appears to have defined your time there. You were a frustrated amateur in Vietnam which caused you to under go a career change. What DID Heil DO in Vietnam? He's never been anymore specific than Dudly the Imposter (of the "seven hostile actions"). He keeps alluding to MARS duty and I did spend time operating a MARS circuit from Tan Son Nhut, but only in an off duty capacity. That must be the MARS duty that he refers to. Or maybe not. Damifino. Heil just hasn't been specifc about it. Can't "take shots" at something invisible. :-) Poor Davie has forgotten my quoting from the Army Center for Military History which mentions the good morale service that Army MARS did in Vietnam. I think Len's a little too hard on you guys. I'm sure that your cuts and jabs are given with the best of intentions. I'm sure Jack the Ripper thought the same... :-) I'm also sure Ted Bundy thought all his female victims "were asking for it." Len's description of what it was like to be under artillery fire--even though he was never actually under artillery fire. I was once but it was from U.S. Army artillery. :-) Just the same, the 8235th Army Unit (that I was in) never allowed any Tokyo territory to fall into communist hands! :-) At the same time, that same battalion of signalmen were moving message "traffic" at the rate of 220 thousand a month over the Army Command and Administrative Network (later integrated into the DCS or Defense Communications System), a worldwide network. All with TTY. Not a single morse code link in that system since 1948. I thought that he was quoting W0EX or GrayJL or Xray or all three when he said that. Irrelevant. If Davie says I did bad, then I did bad. He is da Judge! "Heah come da judge...heah come da judge!" That brings us back to RST Jim. It is apparent that he's done a number of things in amateur radio. Perhaps he hasn't been around long enough to see who and what Len Anderson is. Maybe his agenda in defending Len is something entirely different. Perhaps he'll explain. I'll be around after the CQ WW SSB DX 'test. James Weir runs RST Engineering. It is located in Grass Valley, CA, in Nevada County (California's "gold country"). He ran for Governor of California, had his picture in the L.A. Times as one of many candidates. [a former Austrian citizen won the election] I sent Jim Weir one of my computer programs (LCie4, synthesis and analysis of passive-component inductor-capacitor filters) and he stated that this (freeware) program has been used by his students (successfully) in Grass Valley. We had some brief e-mail exchages that resulted in my modifying the older LCie program to fit the DOS 7 in newer Windows. LCie was written in MS FORTRAN 5.1 but on an earlier operating system and that (now unsupported by MS) FORTRAN did not have the compiler links to fit DOS 7. LCie4 runs only under DOS, doesn't have the flash, dash, or pizazz of color Windows but is nonetheless accurate and proven. It is freeware to anyone requesting it...something I mentioned in rec.radio. amateur.homebrew some time ago. RST Engineering makes some neat electronics for general aviation aircraft. RST has a nice website if anyone cares to look. One of the neat things they do is what I would term "SURFACE MOUNT VHF antennas" for aircraft fabric surfaces. :-) Neat! They don't stick out in the airstream and thus have minimal drag. [international civil aviation band is 108 to 137 MHz] But, but, but what if the Coslo BBS is up and running? Hi, hi! Then the Coslonaut will - once again - be "at the edge of space!" By the way, outer space is only a half hour's drive away... provided your car can go straight UP. :-) bit bit |
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