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![]() "Tebojockey" wrote /snip somewhat outmoded means of communication. Even for seafarers, GMDSS is taking over and code is used less and less. /snip Somewhat outmoded? Used less and less? Here's an update: Even at sea, where code died a slow death as far back as the 1960's (some hangers-on who liked it persisted through the 80's) there was no need for any radio operator to have memorized more than two letters of code after that point. Except for an outdated concept of licensing. That is also long gone from the maritime world, with no radio officer aboard any longer. Why? Simple economics. In concert with great advances in safety of life at sea, the need for either code or the radioman who knew it faded away completely a long time ago. I agree with you that anyone who experiments or legitimately repairs or modifies radio transmitting equipment should be licensed, and for the good reasons you explained. But the fact is that neither aircraft nor marine vessels in private or commercial or military use whose lives depend on communication, have any such requirements for the operators. It is in fact quite "plug-n-play" and this is the major reason the MF and HF bands are still in use at all. When that equipment is no longer competitive with modern satellite systems, we will see it disappear entirely from commercial use. By that time new technologies will have other uses for the spectrum, and its hard to imagine how far some of that will go. But it is no longer relevant to continue to drag old habits (CW) along, unless you are forming an "old habit we do for fun" club. If Amateur Radio allows itself to be relegated to that category, as the legal team proposing new BPL rules argued in open court last Fall (which they won by the way, in spite of heroic efforts by the ARRL and others), it has nobody to thank but itself. 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Virginia |
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