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It is NOT the code tests and exams that is the big turnoff -- it is a lack
of good old fashioned "Yankee Can Do" You either see "outdated useless requirements" as a challenge to overcome and achieve your goals or you whine and drop out. All of the below is such a gross generalization that it is not worthy of a response. Maybe spend your time training new folks, get involved in emergency communications and promote Amateur Radio. P.S. Good luck with your silly phones when the big one hits. During our fires in So Calif -- they were useless. -- Lamont Cranston wrote in message oups.com... The ham radio hobby really needs to rethink the way that it controls access to the hobby. Continuing to require seriously outdated tests like morse code is a turnoff to many potential amateur radio buffs. Why not try something revolutionary such as live testing for safe and courteous operation using voice and digital modes. When I listen to the guys on HF my sense is that their average age continues to increase. I also detect that overall participation is way off from a decade ago - lots of open space in what were once crowded chunks of spectrum. I hear very few young and virtually no female voices of any age. Ham radio needs to think of changes to become a worthwhile alternative to the many other modes of communicating that do not require a license. If it continues doing business as it has then it's future will indeed be short - possibly much less than 2050 as mentioned in the earlier thread. The remaining members can look forward to the FCC continuing to divert more amateur radio spectrum to commercial interests that want to use it. By way of background I come from a family of radio amateurs. My son (an electrical engineer) considered the hobby, but thought the licensing requirement silly and the morse code requirement laughable in todays world. He can talk around the world several ways via the internet. He has a cell phone that does much the same thing a handheld tribander does - allows him to talk with other people. It looks a lot like a handheld, but it costs less and doesn't require a license. Time for the hobby and it's gatekeeper to wake up before it is too late. Ric Trexell wrote: I was reading a few of the posts about how there will not be a need for ham radio in the future due to all the new ways of communicating. That has a lot to do with it but I think the biggest problem with ham radio is the hams themselves. CB'ers killed CB'ing with bad language and hams are doing it with those stupid contests. I remember as a kid getting my first SW radio and listening to hams talk about their lives and the area that they lived in and stuff like that. Now when I turn it on I get guys talking only about their radio or calling CQ CQ contest. Then another will come back and say they are 5 and 9 out here in Kansas and soon the guy is calling CQ CQ contest again. Does any one think that people are going to invest in a radio and all the learning to do what are nothing more than fancy radio checks? If that is what the ham bands are going to be used for, then I say turn them over to business and telephone radio freqs. Ric. |
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