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#1
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![]() "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Here's a quote from your homepage, homeboy: "The common goal of DXers was to receive letters or "QSL" cards verifying that the reception did, in fact, occur." http://www.davidgleason.com/ I guess whatever QSL's you may possess mean nothing as well. Note the keyword "was." I was referring to events of 45 years ago or so. Today, the meaning of a QSL or verification has changed, due to the internet, the decline of the hobby and other factors. Today, a QSL has lost most of its value in proving reception, in fact. |
#2
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![]() David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Here's a quote from your homepage, homeboy: "The common goal of DXers was to receive letters or "QSL" cards verifying that the reception did, in fact, occur." http://www.davidgleason.com/ I guess whatever QSL's you may possess mean nothing as well. Note the keyword "was." I was referring to events of 45 years ago or so. Today, the meaning of a QSL or verification has changed, due to the internet, the decline of the hobby and other factors. Today, a QSL has lost most of its value in proving reception, in fact. Your opinion of course. dxAce Michigan USA |
#3
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![]() "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Here's a quote from your homepage, homeboy: "The common goal of DXers was to receive letters or "QSL" cards verifying that the reception did, in fact, occur." http://www.davidgleason.com/ I guess whatever QSL's you may possess mean nothing as well. Note the keyword "was." I was referring to events of 45 years ago or so. Today, the meaning of a QSL or verification has changed, due to the internet, the decline of the hobby and other factors. Today, a QSL has lost most of its value in proving reception, in fact. Your opinion of course. No, not an opinion. More like a consensus. The value of a QSL is related to the value of a reception report. In the past, a report could not be generated and send in a timely form without actually hearing a stations. Today, web pages with streaming, tunable remote web receivers, and easy and cheap telephone connections make a reception report easy to make without ever having to hear a radio station on (one of) its frequency (ies). In the 60's, the only doubt involved MW DX reports that could be faked by listening to the same station on SW. Today, nearly every report on every station could be suspect as there are more and easy ways to hear stations that do not involve the use of a radio and aerial. For this reason, many DXers have ceased to report DX (in part, of course, due to cost, low response, etc., also). Many of us prefer recordings to QSLs and find it more entertaining to listen to a CD of catches than to look at slips of cardboard called QSLs. In the days when I was most active in reporting, I got above 2300 verifications from 87 countries, on MW. Today, I do not report at all. |
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