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#41
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In article ,
"Brian Hill" wrote: "Frank Dresser" wrote in message Ultimately, there's a chance something wonderful may happen if the old line international broadcasters go away. The international broadcast bands will be nearly empty, and they won't be refilled any faster than the other currently underutilixed SW bands. Hobby broadcasters could start broadcasting, and the governments might not even care if there's no international broadcasting to be interfered with. Frank Dresser You may have something there Frank. Lets hope. I cant see the short-wave medium going away. There's always someone going to use it. Good point. It may end up like CB. Unlicensed and uncared for, because (relatively speaking) no one is listening. Dan Drake R8, Radio Shack DX-440, Grundig Satellit 650, Satellit 700, YB400 Tecsun PL-230 (YB550PE), Kaito KA1102 Hallicraters S-120 (1962) Zenith black dial 5 tube Tombstone (1937) E. H. Scott 23 tube Imperial Allwave in Tasman cabinet (1936) |
#42
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![]() "Dan" wrote in message news:me- Good point. It may end up like CB. Unlicensed and uncared for, because (relatively speaking) no one is listening. Dan Gee Dan. I hope it doesn't get that bad. -- 73 Brian ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die. Brian's Radio Universe http://webpages.charter.net/brianehill/ |
#43
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![]() "Dan" wrote in message ... In article , Good point. It may end up like CB. Unlicensed and uncared for, because (relatively speaking) no one is listening. Dan That's about it. What would happen if the governments abandon the SW broadcast bands? How much effort would the government agencies make tracking down and prosecuting unlicensed broadcasters? Enforcement depends, not only on the law, but on how many important toes get stepped on. I'll guess they will have more important things to do with their time and budgets unless the pirates interfere with the established broadcasters, TV, radio amateurs or whatever. I suppose they could even legitimize hobby SW broadcasting and charge a reasonable licence fee. Treat the SW broadcast bands like a national park. Frank Dresser |
#44
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WShoots1 wrote:
Certainly shortwave broadcasting should continue to serve third world countries. I wish Venezuela had a government shortwave station on the air. I think The States will be attacking there via Columbia very shortly. Venezuela is the fifth largest producer of oil in the world. Bush is trying to tie the Spain bombings to Venezuelan funding. With his record of dishonesty, not many will believe him . mike |
#45
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Paul_Morphy wrote:
The Richard Clarke book is a case in point. Although it is selling well, it is not changing many peoples' minds about the role of the government before and after 9/11. People who were inclined to think the government failed find support in the book, but people who think the government is doing a fine job don't believe it. The people who think the government is doing a fine job won't be buying the book at all. I do miss the old days, though. There was nothing so enervating as listening to R. Tirana, when Albania hated everybody. I used to think enervating meant something like invigorating, or energizing. Then I found out it meant the OPPOSITE of what I thought... mike |
#46
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"B Banton" wrote in message
... On Mon, 05 Apr 2004 13:27:56 GMT, "LewBob" wrote: Our local Cable and PBS each carry BBC and Deutsche Welle every evening. (digital cable service carries BBCWorld 24/7) Shortwave is obsolete. Unfortunatly. Not entirely obsolete. Having recently visited Cuba (legally as a working journalist), I listen to Radio Havana almost every night. Got a chance to meet three of the folks working there during my stay in Havana. Fascinating country. Wonderful people. All they need is a little freedom and opportunity. Oh is that all. Just a "little freedom and opportunity". I could go into considerable -- off topic -- discussion about the Cuban people, but I will try to be concise. Considering that Cuba is (and always has been) a Third World country, the people are remarkably well educated, spirited and welcoming. They are ingenious at making do with what they have and keeping mechanical things working. They live under a totalitarian regime that suppresses all opposition -- as best it can -- and the socialist system provides free freedoms and little opportunity for advancement, therefore no incentives to improve productivity and no hope of improving their lifestyles. Restricted though they are, they manage to subsist at a higher level that the average citizens in almost any other Third World country. If Castro would allow them a few freedoms, e.go. to travel, to own, buy and sell cars and property, to change jobs, I believe the Cuban people would amaze a lot of onlookers with their abilities and passions. Yeah, just a little freedom and opportunity. |
#47
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How does one forget the Radio Tirana interval signal titled
"With Pick Axe and Rifle" Those were the shortwave days. Greg "Harris" wrote in message ... Dan wrote: Yeah. Radio Moscow on the old Cuba relay on 11840 calling us "running dog capitalists" was fun. Now VOR has commercials! Not to forget Radio Peking and Radio Tirana! Art Harris |
#48
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I think The States will be attacking there via Columbia very shortly.
Venezuela is the fifth largest producer of oil in the world. Also, It's a member of OPEC and has the sweetest crude in the world. But back to your statement: Regarding Haiti, Kerry is pro-democratic government but, regarding Venezuela, he is anti-democratic government.The difference is that Haiti has no oil. Speaking of FM stations, Venezuela has them, but they are privately-owned. So, Prez Chavez allows unlicensed pro-government stations to operate. Which reminds me... The FCC is illegally controlling intRAstate radiation. But the FCC has, as has the IRS, the guns. Bill, K5BY |
#49
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Cops (especially narcs and detectives) have been using cellphones for
many years due to security issues. The funny thing is Nextel may have to reconfigure their whole system to make room for cop radios on 800. On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 16:01:46 -0400, "Corbin Ray" wrote: This is a time of change throughout the broadcasting industry. My local small-town police force, who I thought would be broadcasting VHF forever, skipped right by trunking, and now our entire town's communications is handled through Nextel. As a former newsperson, this breaks my heart, especially when I have several scanners that won't be a whole lot of use to me from now on. |
#50
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The people who think the government is doing a good job aren't the
type who are likely to read anything. On Tue, 06 Apr 2004 01:18:29 GMT, m II wrote: Paul_Morphy wrote: The Richard Clarke book is a case in point. Although it is selling well, it is not changing many peoples' minds about the role of the government before and after 9/11. People who were inclined to think the government failed find support in the book, but people who think the government is doing a fine job don't believe it. The people who think the government is doing a fine job won't be buying the book at all. I do miss the old days, though. There was nothing so enervating as listening to R. Tirana, when Albania hated everybody. I used to think enervating meant something like invigorating, or energizing. Then I found out it meant the OPPOSITE of what I thought... mike |
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