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[email protected] May 10th 05 11:46 AM

On Wed, 04 May 2005 15:30:02 GMT, "DX99" wrote:

Oh yeah - have alot of that, too. Looking for a nice spectrum poster, maybe
an Icom or a Yaesu product poster, that sort of thing.


Somewhere on the ARRL site they have a nice, extensive color
spectrum poster. Take the file to Kinko's or similar and get it
printed up fullsize -- 11 x 17 or thereabouts.

OK, I didn't find it there, but I think this is it:

http://www.ntia.doc.gov/osmhome/allochrt.html

I believe it's also published periodically in QST.

There's something similar at

http://www.thinkgeek.com/cubegoodies/posters/techie/6b15/

... but I haven't seen it in person.





"raoul" wrote in message
...
In article 2eZde.1291$Vu.570@trnddc07, DX99
wrote:

Refinishing the shack here and have lots of new wall space. Any

suggestions
where to find amateur radio related posters, plaques, wall art, etc?

Have
most of the maps and whatnot from the ARRL site. Thanks in advance!


All the rest of the stuff on a ham's wall has to be earned- QSL cards,
contest plaques, etc. You could always put up framed pictures of
youand yopu buddies doing hammy type stuff- public service, Field Day,
U/VHF roving, mountaintopping, that sort of thing...







[email protected] May 10th 05 12:20 PM

On Wed, 04 May 2005 15:37:12 GMT, David wrote:

On Wed, 04 May 2005 15:28:57 GMT, "DX99" wrote:

Those are nice. Have thought about that - how much?


"David" wrote in message
. ..
On Wed, 04 May 2005 05:39:10 GMT, "DX99" wrote:

Refinishing the shack here and have lots of new wall space. Any

suggestions
where to find amateur radio related posters, plaques, wall art, etc? Have
most of the maps and whatnot from the ARRL site. Thanks in advance!


Want to buy a Geochron?




$1,000.00


Varies -- mostly depending on what kind of wood frame.

Save your money -- see http://geoclock.home.att.net/ -- it's
the Geochron clock in sofware, but does far more than the original,
wall-hung version. Usual disclaimer -- no connection to the company,
just a long-time, extremely satisfied customer since the first
shareware version many years ago (now at v8.4).

This is absolutely the best and most useful piece of software
I've ever bought, version after version. Hardly a day goes by that I
don't use it at least one time.

It has a huge selection of zoomable maps. Extremely
customizable. Can switch between displaying city names and counry
names / natural feature names. Allows you to set cursor anchor point,
then move cursor while displaying direction and distance of cursor
current location. Variable update intervals, from realtime to one day
per update. (watch sun trace the analemma throughout the year by
setting updates at 24 hours). Lat/long grid display, sun/moon icons
and dislay of their respective subsolar/sublunar points, as well as
alt/azimuth directions.

Download the 30-day demo, but be warned -- it's a pale
imitation of any level of the purchased product. It only has a few
maps and zooms in just once to the US, or flips to a polar or
from-space view if you click outside the US. The full versions will
zoom in multiple times to nearly anywhere in the world.


Prices range from Basic ($25, downloaded) to $90 (Pro with Ham
Package, CD + diskette -- see http://geoclock.home.att.net/ham.htm).
Briefly -- The package includes a custom Azimuthal-Equidistant map
centered on your ham station, a call sign data base, and utility
programs.

For maximum convenience, get the latter package -- you will
not regret it. Skip the ham package if you're not a licensed amateur.
Updates, when they occur are quite cheap compared to most other
software.

I repeat -- I have no financial interest in the company. But I
have gotten more, and more constant, use out of Geoclock than any
other piece of software I own. OK, except maybe mail and newsreaders
and web browsers.

I've also never seen a better tool for making geography clear
to kids.

David May 10th 05 01:14 PM

On Tue, 10 May 2005 11:20:46 GMT, wrote:


I repeat -- I have no financial interest in the company. But I
have gotten more, and more constant, use out of Geoclock than any
other piece of software I own. OK, except maybe mail and newsreaders
and web browsers.

I've also never seen a better tool for making geography clear
to kids.

**** the kids. Having a $1,500 clock/map on the wall impresses the
babes.


[email protected] May 10th 05 09:02 PM

How about multiple clocks on the wall, one for each time zone. You
could use funny city names for the time zones, like Pahrump for Pacific
time, Pasaic for the east coast, etc.


wavetrapper May 10th 05 10:26 PM


http://www.qrpis.org/%7Ek3ng/fcc_ntia_agree.html

For your wall
A gift to all radio fans from the freakin' FCC


[email protected] May 12th 05 04:13 AM

On Tue, 10 May 2005 12:14:11 GMT, David wrote:

On Tue, 10 May 2005 11:20:46 GMT, wrote:


I repeat -- I have no financial interest in the company. But I
have gotten more, and more constant, use out of Geoclock than any
other piece of software I own. OK, except maybe mail and newsreaders
and web browsers.

I've also never seen a better tool for making geography clear
to kids.

**** the kids. Having a $1,500 clock/map on the wall impresses the
babes.


Sure -- the dim asses who'd rather watch you stroke your ego
than spend the $1400 bucks change on them.


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