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In article xlWpb.106513$HS4.889659@attbi_s01, jim.douglas@genesis-
software.com says... Anyone know this, very strong/clear here in Dallas. I think Radio =D6ster= reich International (=D6RF)? Here's why I always make sure I have the latest copy of Passport to=20 World Band Radio handy. In the "Blue Pages" you can look up a frequency=20 and see who is scheduled to broadcast on that frequency at what time. There are three publications that I absolutely MUST have for my=20 shortwave listening, in order of priority: 1) Monitoring Times magazine 2) Passport to World Band Radio 3) World Radio and Television Handbook Monitoring Times (www.monitoringtimes.com) functions as a "TV Guide for=20 Shortwave" for me. With 20 pages each month devoted to broadcast=20 schedules and featured programs, it's a must-have. I get mine in the=20 "MT Express" version, which is an Adobe Acrobat PDF file I download each=20 month. Grove sends out an email to their MT Express subscribers on the=20 20th of each month with the FTP information to download the file. Since=20 it's a PDF, I save each copy to CD-ROM for future reference. Also, they=20 are so attentive to detail that when you see a URL for a web site in the=20 text of an article, you can click on that URL in Acrobat Reader and=20 it'll bring up your web browser on that site! And the table of contents=20 also has that ability -- click on an item in the TOC and go straight to=20 that page in the magazine. Well done, Bob! (I cheat a little -- once I've downloaded mine, I go in with Acrobat and=20 copy out the text of the hourly broadcast schedules to a text file, then=20 I convert that to Microsoft Reader format and keep it on my PocketPC=20 palmtop computer. That way I have it in electronic form wherever I am!) I've already explained one reason why I have to have the current=20 Passport book (www.passband.com, also available from Amazon.com,=20 Universal Radio, Ham Radio Outlet, and just about anywhere else you can=20 think of). Not only are the Blue Pages of infinite value to me, but the=20 annual reviews of various receivers are of great use. They also have=20 the addresses and QSL information for just about every shortwave=20 broadcaster you may expect to find on the air. The WRTH book is a great reference for broadcasters in other areas of=20 the spectrum besides shortwave. If you're DXing the AM broadcast band,=20 for example, you can pretty easily find the address for the station so=20 you can send your reception reports. (Since MW DXing is only a side=20 interest in my radio listening, it's not as high a priority for me as=20 the other two, but it's definitely up there.) My one complaint is that I wish there were more publishers that followed=20 Bob Grove's example and published in PDF format. It's a widely-used=20 format, cuts down on the use of paper, and is in my opinion far more=20 useful than the traditional paper format. I would gladly plunk down my=20 bucks right this second if I could get Passport and WRTH in some=20 electronic format, either PDF or perhaps a CD-ROM-based format. =20 -- //Steve// Steve Silverwood, KB6OJS Fountain Valley, CA Email: Web: http://home.earthlink.net/~kb6ojs_steve |