Hamvention
amateur radio buff writes "The Hamvention is coming up on May 16 - 18, for all you amateur radio people out there. This is the worlds biggest Ham fest held in Dayton, Ohio. With over 2500+ space outdoor vendor, and 500 inside exhibit spaces, find any amateur radio and electronic items there. Also the The 11th Annual Dayton Contest Dinner is held this year too! Dont miss it!"
I think the biggest change I've seen is that the "tinkerers" (those who modify commercial gear for ham purposes, or design their own stuff) are no longer so great a force in the hobby. The hams who take the hobby seriously enough to have a labful of RF test gear, and who know how to use it, seem to be getting increasingly rare. I know, because I'm one of them! ;-)
It used to be that I could turn on any of the local 2m (VHF) or 70cm (UHF) repeater channels, and hear a discussion going on that at least included something technical. It used to be that I could pop onto those same channels with a technical question, and chances were good that someone would know how to answer it.
Not any more. It seems that I can have a conversation with a dozen different hams, and out of them there will be 1-2 that know anything more about their radio than how to turn it on and use it. "Appliance Operators," once a rarity in the ham field, have become largely the norm.
I have mixed feelings about it. On the one wing, it's sad, I think, to see so many people take their exams just for the sake of taking them, and then forget everything they learned and have no further interest in expanding their electronics knowledge.
On the other wing, a big piece of my side business is dependent on those who choose not to do the technical side for themselves. I try to give my customers a bit of free education as they walk out the door with their newly-programmed radio, but I never know where they're going to go with it.
Also, don't forget that tinkerers need stuff to tinker with. The quality and quantity of stuff showing up at many ham swap meets all over the country seems to be going down. I think it's due largely to the depredations of Ebay. Why comb the swaps when you can search for goodies from your easy chair?
I have an answer for that. Social skills! Ham swaps are more than swaps; they're social gatherings, just like the rest of any ham convention. As I've said on my Ebay 'About Me' page, where can you get a clearer impression of who you're buying stuff from? By looking at someone's feedback record, or looking them in the eye and watching how they interact in real time?
Anyway, I've drifted off-topic enough. I plan to make the 'pilgrimage' to Dayton, possibly in 2004. Until then, those of you that are going, good luck and good journey.
73 de KC7GR
Bruce Lane, KC7GR,
Blue Feather Technologies
--the equipment has gotten much worse to work on, and cheaper to just replace and upgrade. There's not as much incentive. What used to require changing crystals and extensive modding is now just 100 dollars away at the store, already done for you. I'd also say that video games taking over as a hobby was more of a factor in declining interest than just "the internet" and computers. Extremely similar time frame if you think on it some. Another factor was cost of telephony changing, and cell phones becoming available, and actually *working* to some extent. Cell phones with free (more or less) long distance almost eliminated any need for long distance radio, at least for most people. On and on, I don't think any one particular reason lead to the decline, just a combination of factors all happening around the same time. It's also a hobby that requires a lot of study and actual skull sweat, whereas our society is now designed around short attention spans, rote learning and consumerism, programmed almost from birth and emphasized in the public schools. If it's not instant, it's not *real*.