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On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 12:52:02 -0500, "JLewis"
wrote: People always try and hold on to 'old technology' - myself included...I personally think the BBC was wise to pull the plug when it did, instead of sinking more money into a sinking ship... Shortwave, Ham Radio, CB, etc. (all of which I still use and enjoy) - are just buggy whips - soon to be outdated and displaced - except for the few who cling to them for their own personal satisfaction - not for real communication. YMMV This is a logically good argument, but it falls short when portability comes into play. The whole reason why radio (per se; not specifically shortwave) remains so popular despite TV and the Internet is because you can take a portable radio with you wherever you go; into the garden, in your car, in the bathroom, on holiday, in a tent, in a caravan (trailer), in a motorhome... I can't do this with a computer. Firstly a laptop costs twenty or more times more money than a radio, secondly the battery life is considerably less, but mostly there just isn't universal affordable wifi or mobile broadband yet. I used to be able to take a small shortwave whip-antenna radio on holiday to America and listen to the BBC back home. Now I can't. Now either I have to carry around thirty metres of random wire and some very detailed frequency charts, or I have to lug my laptop which can't stay away from the mains electricty for more than 3 hours and requires me to subscribe to expensive mobile internet connections (or worse, expose my security to the prospect of hijacking someone else's open network). I can't overstate how ****ed off I am about this. The BBC made their overseas radio services difficult, expensive and non-portable. I miss my radio. And to top it all, my TV licence, paying the BBC, has gone up again! If it wasn't for Doctor Who I'd be picketting Bush House. -- Andrew Oakley andrew/atsymbol/aoakley/stop/com |
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