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John Smith wrote:
YEAH!!! Hide all the answers and require 'em to come up with the answers psychically!!! ROFLOL! Get real, any college is test smart, any CS/EE technology student will blow the doors off any test any panel can come up with in damn short order. I figure that the A+ Certified computer technicians at my vocational school (whose ranks I hope to join by early next year) know more about electronics theory and construction than the average appliance operator ham. It seems to me that a lot of hams are old farts who were educated on tube equipment-all this modern stuff, including microprocessors, might as well be Chinese to them. I like the idea somebody had of an over the air test, graded by a panel of judges situated around the country. Of course, with today's appliance equipment one just has to plug it in and hook it up. I'd like to see some stuff on electrical engineering (basic theory and application) and maybe a hands on portion where the prospective ham builds and operates a simple rig. That would eliminate the "appliance operator syndrome". Of course, all this would require a lot more commitment on the part of the FCC than just a written test where the published answers can be memorized, but the FCC has shown that they don't give a flying **** about amateur radio. Like the rest of government, they're in business to give maximum profit to a favored few (the NAB, in this case) and extract maximum taxes (fines) out of the rest of us. All the FCC cares about is AM/FM broadcast radio (thus the hefty fines handed out to FM pirates while SW pirates operate with impunity for years) and TV. The FCC doesn't control cable or satellites, which have been and are taking market share away from on air operators, so the FCC is focusing on what it has control over. But SW? Forget it. WWCR operates in the tropical bands, WWRB operates out of band, and the FCC does nothing (and did I mention the pirates?). There's no profit in SW, no NAB for SW, so the FCC ignores it. John "MnMikew" wrote in message ... "beerbarrel" wrote in message ... On Thu, 21 Jul 2005 14:39:12 -0400, dxAce wrote: John Plimmer wrote: I couldn't agree more with dropping CW from the ham test. It reminds me of the legal profession here in South Africa. It used to be a requirement that lawyers had to pass Latin in high school and have at least two courses in Latin for their law degree. That was scrapped about ten years ago amid loud protests from the dinosaurs. Today the law profession is flourishing more than ever before with high quality judges and advocates. The only thing I have noticed is that the high and mighty no longer spew out Latin quotations = R.I.P. Our SARL (South African Radio League) ham club is diminishing by the year and the once crowded ham bands are now empty. We need to make it easier for new entrants to come into this wonderful hobby. Why does everything need to be made easier? Can't the 'tards learn the code? If so, WHY can't the 'tards learn the code? If ordinary folks could pass the test in years past what is so different today? Laziness? dxAce Michigan USA BINGO! It seems everybody wants something for nothing these days. What do you mean nothing? There's still a test. Remove the CW and make the tests harder then. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
rd:
I don't know about the A+ test, in fact, I wasn't even aware that was still around--last time I seen it was when it still seemed focused on DOS... However, any student in math, sciences, engineering, etc would have no problem studying, digesting the information and regurgitating it on a test--with excellent results... just fact... John "running dogg" wrote in message ... John Smith wrote: YEAH!!! Hide all the answers and require 'em to come up with the answers psychically!!! ROFLOL! Get real, any college is test smart, any CS/EE technology student will blow the doors off any test any panel can come up with in damn short order. I figure that the A+ Certified computer technicians at my vocational school (whose ranks I hope to join by early next year) know more about electronics theory and construction than the average appliance operator ham. It seems to me that a lot of hams are old farts who were educated on tube equipment-all this modern stuff, including microprocessors, might as well be Chinese to them. I like the idea somebody had of an over the air test, graded by a panel of judges situated around the country. Of course, with today's appliance equipment one just has to plug it in and hook it up. I'd like to see some stuff on electrical engineering (basic theory and application) and maybe a hands on portion where the prospective ham builds and operates a simple rig. That would eliminate the "appliance operator syndrome". Of course, all this would require a lot more commitment on the part of the FCC than just a written test where the published answers can be memorized, but the FCC has shown that they don't give a flying **** about amateur radio. Like the rest of government, they're in business to give maximum profit to a favored few (the NAB, in this case) and extract maximum taxes (fines) out of the rest of us. All the FCC cares about is AM/FM broadcast radio (thus the hefty fines handed out to FM pirates while SW pirates operate with impunity for years) and TV. The FCC doesn't control cable or satellites, which have been and are taking market share away from on air operators, so the FCC is focusing on what it has control over. But SW? Forget it. WWCR operates in the tropical bands, WWRB operates out of band, and the FCC does nothing (and did I mention the pirates?). There's no profit in SW, no NAB for SW, so the FCC ignores it. John "MnMikew" wrote in message ... "beerbarrel" wrote in message ... On Thu, 21 Jul 2005 14:39:12 -0400, dxAce wrote: John Plimmer wrote: I couldn't agree more with dropping CW from the ham test. It reminds me of the legal profession here in South Africa. It used to be a requirement that lawyers had to pass Latin in high school and have at least two courses in Latin for their law degree. That was scrapped about ten years ago amid loud protests from the dinosaurs. Today the law profession is flourishing more than ever before with high quality judges and advocates. The only thing I have noticed is that the high and mighty no longer spew out Latin quotations = R.I.P. Our SARL (South African Radio League) ham club is diminishing by the year and the once crowded ham bands are now empty. We need to make it easier for new entrants to come into this wonderful hobby. Why does everything need to be made easier? Can't the 'tards learn the code? If so, WHY can't the 'tards learn the code? If ordinary folks could pass the test in years past what is so different today? Laziness? dxAce Michigan USA BINGO! It seems everybody wants something for nothing these days. What do you mean nothing? There's still a test. Remove the CW and make the tests harder then. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
dx-boob:
Actually, I have a severe distaste for "roger beep." (indeed, I should think I would dislike his whole family! grin) However, my computers sound card, patched to a mic in is able to say cutsie little mp3's, such as: "Houston, I think we have a problem" and, "Maybe the dingo ate yer baby!", etc... I don't really do echo either, however the dsp software on the sound card (written by myself, in C++) is able to provide a plethora of strange/unusual and not-often-heard effects, it is one-of-a-kind, I assure you... grin John "dxAce" wrote in message ... John Smith wrote: rd: Personally, my auto-ident in CW will always be close to my heart, I fail to even notice it anymore... You got one of those on your CB? A 'roger-beep' too? dxAce Michigan USA http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
running dogg wrote:
But those aren't actually copied by the pilots, instead a light goes on in the cockpit when the plane passes over a beacon, so the pilot knows he's on course. The code is there so the pilot can verify, if necessary, that he is tuned to the correct VOR. The Morse characters are printed on the sectional chart next to the VOR symbol. |
"dxAce" wrote in message ... The written test probably does as well. Should that also be dropped. If one can't learn even a minimum 5 WPM then they have no business in amateur radio. 5 WPM is incredibly easy, heck, even the 'tards should be able to master that. I think 20 WPM is easy. Maybe 20 should be required? DeWayne dxAce Michigan USA |
"MnMikew" wrote in message ... THATS MY POINT! Sure it might get crowded, I doubt it but it could happen. Seems the more the merrier? So people get bored on 2 and 6m and eventually drop out of ham radio. Perhaps if their interest was peaked with some HF they'd get motivated to get the code. Or if they dont like HF, no biggie. The HF ham bands are nearly deserted compared to 20 years ago. |
I have to stay awoke tonight from 2:00 AM till 3:30 AM to watch that old
Joan Blondell,Ann Dvorak,James Cagney,The Crowd Roars movie on tv.I need to buy me some kind of a gizmo to record them old movies I like. cuhulin |
"beerbarrel" wrote in message ... CW is efficient because you only have to understand the signal pattern and not the signal audio. The narrow signal also takes up little bandwidth. Not only does this make CW very efficient but also the most reliable form of communication for a person to use. Sending at 5 WPM it takes a half hour to say what you can say on a mic in a few minutes. |
"Cmdr Buzz Corey" wrote in message ... John S. wrote: Yes, or require that prospective drivers be proficient in the use of a buggy whip in addition to passing a written and practical driving test. If they are going to drive a buggy, it might be a good idea. As far as the 5 wpm code goes it's near worthless. It there was an emergency the person would be more likely to die from old age by the time he got the message sent or copied. If there's going to be a code requirement it should be fast enough to accomplish something immediately rather than too late at 5 wpm. Let's start at 20 wpm and make everyone retest periodically so they won't get rusty. But there probably wouldn't be many hams left that could pass the 20. Actually I'd rather see the code dropped. |
UP the FCC,Sideways! Frankly,George,I believe there are nothing but a
bunch of Fools and Idiots and Morons running the FCC nowdays.Let us study for a moment.Wasen't it them Fools at FCC that was considering broad band over powerlines.Yeah,and FEMA started b......g about it and them Fools at FCC backed down.UP the FCC,Sideways! 100 hundred miles Sideways! cuhulin |
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