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#1
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Hello John,
Having just gotten back into MW DXing, I was wondering, do the stations, primarily in North America, still send out the old "card" type QSL cards? Last ones I had were from my high school days with and old Hallicrafter's S-120! Thanks, Bob Grimes -- |
#2
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On Apr 26, 10:38*pm, "Count Floyd"
wrote: Hello John, Having just gotten back into MW DXing, I was wondering, do the stations, primarily in North America, still send out the old "card" type QSL cards? *Last ones I had were from my high school days with and old Hallicrafter's S-120! Thanks, Bob Grimes -- Hi Bob, Mostly they don't - your lucky if you get a decent e-mail respone. JP Montagu |
#3
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#4
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On 26 Apr, 22:38, "Count Floyd"
wrote: Hello John, Having just gotten back into MW DXing, I was wondering, do the stations, primarily in North America, still send out the old "card" type QSL cards? Last ones I had were from my high school days with and old Hallicrafter's S-120! Thanks, Bob Grimes -- Extremely few do. Of the 250 latest NA AM veries I've received in the past 2-3 years, perhaps 3 or 4 were "old school" QSL cards. Most of the rest were emails, including a few with a Word file or JPG file attachment. Nowadays, addressing the Program Directors may be more rewarding than addressing the Chief Engineers. And you will need to accept verie texts like "yes, that's us" or similar instead of the traditional QSL text. Actually, writing a traditional reception report with program details etc is probably going to get you nowhere. Station personell are too busy. Emails with a small MP3 or WAV file is what can trigger a response. BM |
#5
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On Apr 27, 4:39*am, bm wrote:
On 26 Apr, 22:38, "Count Floyd" wrote: Hello John, Having just gotten back into MW DXing, I was wondering, do the stations, primarily in North America, still send out the old "card" type QSL cards? *Last ones I had were from my high school days with and old Hallicrafter's S-120! Thanks, Bob Grimes -- - Extremely few do. - Of the 250 latest NA AM veries I've received in the past - 2-3 years, perhaps 3 or 4 were "old school" QSL cards. - Most of the rest were emails, including a few with a Word file - or JPG file attachment. Nowadays, addressing the Program - Directors may be more rewarding than addressing the Chief - Engineers. And you will need to accept verie texts like "yes, - that's us" or similar instead of the traditional QSL text. - - Actually, writing a traditional reception report with program - details etc is probably going to get you nowhere. Station - personell are too busy. Emails with a small MP3 or WAV file - is what can trigger a response. - - BM - BM - Good Insight and Info. ~ RHF |
#6
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Bart Bailey wrote:
In posted on Sun, 27 Apr 2008 04:39:15 -0700 (PDT), bm wrote: Begin Emails with a small MP3 or WAV file is what can trigger a response. Could it trigger an automatic deletion by their email screening application because of it having an attachment? Depends on the attachment size, but yes. If the attachment falls into the range usually used to propagate viruses, the packet sniffer may send it to another bot for examination. In many cases, though, it simply deletes it from the system, regardless of file extension. However, due to the threats by RIAA and some copyright holders, some file extensions, mp3 and wav in particular, are targeted for deletion, or at the very least examination, by a number of ISP's, and corporate e-mail systems. When I left CBS, mp3's didn't make it through the corporate servers. Period. Audio content that was for legitimate use was FTP'd to the corporate host. I understand this policy has been softened since. My ATT account routinely inspects attachments into and out of my account for copyright material. And some of my colleagues have trouble getting through with any audio file. My work account is a lot less restricted. |
#7
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On 1 Mai, 20:07, D Peter Maus wrote:
Bart Bailey wrote: In posted on Sun, 27 Apr 2008 04:39:15 -0700 (PDT), bm wrote: Begin Emails with a small MP3 or WAV file is what can trigger a response. Could it trigger an automatic deletion by their email screening application because of it having an attachment? Depends on the attachment size, but yes. If the attachment falls into the range usually used to propagate viruses, the packet sniffer may send it to another bot for examination. In many cases, though, it simply deletes it from the system, regardless of file extension. You definitely have a point here, and I believe that an increasing number of my reception reports are stopped although a very high majority still slip through the barriers. An alternative approach which I have tested with some success is to upload files to a server such as box.net, and send the url to the addressee. But of course, many are told never to click on unknown links... BM |
#8
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D Peter Maus wrote:
Bart Bailey wrote: In posted on Sun, 27 Apr 2008 04:39:15 -0700 (PDT), bm wrote: Begin Emails with a small MP3 or WAV file is what can trigger a response. Could it trigger an automatic deletion by their email screening application because of it having an attachment? Depends on the attachment size, but yes. If the attachment falls into the range usually used to propagate viruses, the packet sniffer may send it to another bot for examination. In many cases, though, it simply deletes it from the system, regardless of file extension. However, due to the threats by RIAA and some copyright holders, some file extensions, mp3 and wav in particular, are targeted for deletion, or at the very least examination, by a number of ISP's, and corporate e-mail systems. When I left CBS, mp3's didn't make it through the corporate servers. Period. Audio content that was for legitimate use was FTP'd to the corporate host. I understand this policy has been softened since. My ATT account routinely inspects attachments into and out of my account for copyright material. And some of my colleagues have trouble getting through with any audio file. My work account is a lot less restricted. AT&T spies on everything you do. |
#9
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Bart Bailey wrote:
In posted on Thu, 01 May 2008 18:07:50 GMT, D Peter Maus wrote: Begin And some of my colleagues have trouble getting through with any audio file. rename the extension to [.dat] or better, zip it first then rename I exchange encrypted stuff easily enough if it's renamed [.bmp] I wouldn't open that on a Windows machine. You'd have to be nuts. |
#10
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Bart Bailey wrote:
In posted on Fri, 02 May 2008 06:01:49 -0700, dave wrote: Begin You'd have to be nuts. ...or know what you're doing ??? |
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