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Old March 3rd 06, 08:29 PM posted to rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.amateur.policy
Scott in Baltimore
 
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Default ChicagoTribune story ... --- ...

wrote:
Translation: Morse code fans sending out an SOS



I guess I should have had to learn to shoe a horse before I was allowed to drive a car.

As a ham, CW should not be required to use HF, however, the CW portions should
be CW only, and not shared with other weak-signal data modes. Those that want
to use CW should be allowed to ride their horse without having to step over
the other non-CW users. .-.-.-

==old message==

wrote:
Translation: Morse code fans sending out an SOS

By John McCormick
Tribune staff reporter
Published March 2, 2006


A century-old hobby filled with dots and dashes is embroiled in a
debate about its future and what level of training should be expected
of those called on to help during local and national emergencies.

Morse code, a slowly dying language, has become radio's equivalent of
Latin: historically important, but increasingly irrelevant in a world
of cell phones, computers and instant messaging.

With mariners and the military having moved to other technologies long
ago, ham radio operators are virtually the sole practitioners of a
technique that made national and international communication possible
with the telegraph.

Now, after decades of requiring code proficiency to obtain certain
amateur radio licenses, the Federal Communications Commission is
considering a proposal to do away with the qualification, generating
strong emotions among the nation's more than 600,000 operators.

The debate comes after the completion of one of the highest-profile
missions in decades for amateur radio operators, who relayed messages
about everything from medical supplies to missing people when
Hurricane Katrina wiped out telecommunications along the Gulf Coast.

As ham radio operators debate the need for Morse code, military
officials say it is taught in an expansive way at only two U.S. bases,
with just a few dozen members of the full-time military learning it
each year. It is primarily used as a backup for joint operations with
less-developed nations.

"Morse is a fading skill in today's day of information, especially as
we get into networks and cyberspace," said Capt. Kevin Hooley,
commanding officer of the Navy's Center for Information Dominance in
Florida.

The International Maritime Organization officially phased out Morse in
1999 for ships in peril, replacing it with the high-tech Global
Maritime Distress and Safety System. Before that, in 1993, the Coast
Guard shut down its Morse code emergency distress network, a system
that was a throwback to when ships used the chilling "SOS" as their
internationally recognized call for help.

Nations drop requirement

Code requirements for amateur radio licenses have already been
eliminated in some other nations, including New Zealand, Ireland and
Singapore. The FCC is expected to issue a decision this year after
reviewing more than 3,700 written comments.

Although his radio is capable of transmitting voice with near-perfect
clarity, Mike Dinelli prefers to tap away on a Morse code key when he
sends messages around the world to other radio hobbyists. "It's part
of the romance of radio," said Dinelli, 49, a commercial real estate
broker from Skokie who has been a ham radio operator since 1980.

Others say the code requirement is needed to keep the ham radio bands
from degrading to the level of citizens band radio, which peaked in
popularity during the 1970s and was known for its often-colorful
conversation.

"I've always said that we need some hoops to jump through to make it
viable," said Ed Hayes, a ham radio operator in Longview, Wash. "If
you don't have to do anything to get the license, it puts you in the
CB world."

Hayes, a retired community college teacher, learned the code when he
was a Boy Scout. He belongs to the International Morse Code
Preservation Society, which claims about 12,000 members in North
America.

Hayes can send and receive about 25 words per minute in Morse code, a
glacial rate compared to modern, digital technologies. "I don't even
have a microphone hooked up," he said.

Pure nostalgia for some

For others, such views are pure nostalgia for a hobby that has been
hurt by the popularity and communications power of the Internet.

"To require young people to learn an old language that is very seldom
used is a stumbling block for a lot of people to get in the hobby,"
said John Kuntz, a ham radio operator from Fennimore, Wis., who wrote
the FCC to support eliminating the code requirement.

Making it easier to obtain a license could increase the number of
operators at a time when the frequencies authorized for their use have
come under increased pressure. Some in the hobby fear the government
could move to auction off portions of their radio spectrum for other
purposes.

Although few young people are entering the hobby, about 660,000 are
licensed nationally, and roughly 22,000 in Illinois, according to the
American Radio Relay League, a national organization with about
170,000 members.

Kuntz, an electronics technician, said he has little concern that the
ham radio bands will be turned into the trash-talking environment of
CB radio if the Morse code requirement is dropped.

"A bigger problem is not getting enough new people into the hobby to
keep it going," he said. "If we don't keep attracting young people
into the hobby, we aren't going to have that backup system of radio
communications out in the country, which can really be an asset for
public service."

Backers of the code requirement, meanwhile, maintain that Morse has
tremendous advantages during crises. Morse can be sent and received
when less favorable radio conditions prevent voice signals from being
heard, and it requires only basic equipment that is readily available
during emergencies.

"There are counties that are very poor that don't have other kinds of
equipment," Dinelli said. "Hams have to be able to use this mode so
they can communicate in times of need."

Morse code's storied history started on May 24, 1844, when Samuel
Morse transmitted the question, "What hath God wrought?" over 35 miles
of wire from Washington to Baltimore.

The accomplishment amazed observers and started the process of
speeding information across the country and world, replacing the Pony
Express and courier pigeons.

Titanic used wireless code

After the 1912 sinking of the Titanic, which used wireless code to try
to attract help, Congress enacted legislation that required U.S. ships
to use Morse code radiotelegraph equipment for distress calls.

Over the years, the code has changed very little. Bowing to the
importance of the Internet, the @ sign was added in 2003 by the
International Telecommunications Union, the first new character in
decades.

Hooley, the commanding officer at the Navy's information center, said
he is not aware of any military usage of Morse code in recent years.
Still, during operations in the Middle East, he said there were
discussions about whether coalition partners had the capability.

"We never had to resort to it, but it was sometimes asked as a
possibility," he said. "It is a skill that we have to keep."

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Old May 11th 06, 11:35 PM posted to rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.amateur.policy
Norm
 
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Default The Real Ham!

hey muckieduckie remember that real hams do CW cbers r to DUMB... Norm


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