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#1
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Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of
radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. |
#2
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![]() Merlin3rd wrote: Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. Do you have the URL for the Coast Guard frequencies? |
#3
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In article .com,
Steve wrote: Merlin3rd wrote: Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. Do you have the URL for the Coast Guard frequencies? Try http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/marcomms/gmdss/msi.htm Or somewhere around there. Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
#4
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![]() Merlin3rd wrote: Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. Yada, yada, yada. We already knew that so you'd best be running along. dxAce Michigan USA |
#5
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![]() dxAce wrote: Merlin3rd wrote: Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. Yada, yada, yada. We already knew that so you'd best be running along. dxAce Michigan USA The Future Of Radio Exploring the future of radio and wireless technologies. Edited by Harry Helms May 12, 2006 Shortwave Broadcasting Meets Reality "The era of shortwave radio broadcasting is surely, inexorably drawing to a close. Even that starstruck eleven year old boy inside me-----the one enthralled by shortwave radio almost 43 years ago----can see that." "With the huge decline in tropical stations, DRM splatter in other areas, religious broadcasters appearing in the 60-90 meter bands, relays...it is just not the same for me anymore. However, I have wonderful memories from those years that will never be forgotten." "Voice of the Andes' Airs Final English Broadcast on SW". "About 13 years ago, one of our HighText/LLH employees joined the Peace Corps and was going to be posted to Botswana. My going-away present to her was a Grundig portable shortwave radio with digital tuning. I even pre-programmed it with frequencies for the VOA, BBC, Radio South Africa, etc. In a letter, I asked her how she was enjoying listening to shortwave. Her reply was a sheepish admission that she never listened to shortwave; there was too much fading, interference, and the audio was awful. Instead, she preferred listening to AM and FM, and had good reception of the local VOA and BBC relays as well as South African AM stations, especially in the evenings. I don't think her story is unique, even among the permanent residents of Botswana and other areas that we supposedly need to serve by shortwave." "The decline even from a decade ago is remarkable, and from two decades ago it is shocking (check through an old copy of World Radio Television Handbook if you doubt this). There was a time when the 4700 to 5000 kHz range would be filled with broadcasters from Central and South America in the evening hours, African broadcasters in late afternoons and after midnight, and with Pacific and Indonesian stations around dawn. Now you hear more background noise and utility stations in that range than regional and national broadcasters. And where have those listeners gone? Mostly to recently-opened stations on AM and (especially) FM." Remember folks - "keep thinking positively about your Eaton **** E1s" ! |
#6
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![]() dxAce wrote: Merlin3rd wrote: Shortwave is DEAD. Use your computer to listen to a vast arrray of radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world. No radio, no antenna, no static. Shortwave broadcasting is old tech, dying fast. Yada, yada, yada. We already knew that so you'd best be running along. dxAce Michigan USA Mostly, garbage is being broadcast now - religion and boring news. Shortwave is nothing like it used to be. Listening to hams and ultilities is also boring. More and more broadcasters are dropping shortwave and going to either the Internet, or AM. Once "Voice of the Andes", which I regularly listened to, back in the 1960s and 1970s stopped broadcasting, and the BBC stopped broadcasting to the US, I knew shortwave was dead. So, what is the point of plopping down hundreds of dollars for new receivers - most receivers are basically the same and get the same stations. Why spend $500 for an Eaton **** E1, when one can spend $65 for a Degen 1103. |
#7
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#8
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He probally gets HBO too.I dont.
cuhulin |
#9
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He likes to hear them women in them porn internet movie clips
howling.OOOPS! cuhulin |
#10
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On 2006-07-02 00:18:22 -0400, ka6uup said:
Why do you bother to hang out on this group then I'll field that one, he's retarded. |
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