Happy World Amateur Radio Day
An anonymous reader writes "There are over 700,000 ham radio licensees in the USA and about 2 ½ million worldwide. Today, this international community of wireless communications devotees are celebrating World Amateur Radio Day, recalling the advances Amateur Radio Service has made for modern man. Their theme for 2012 is Amateur Radio Satellites: Celebrating 50 Years in Space in remembrance of the launch of the first Amateur Radio satellites OSCAR 1 on December 12, 1961 and the launch of OSCAR 2 on June 2, 1962. Their ranks have included people like Steve Wozniak of Apple and Jack Kilby who invented the integrated circuit, Dr. Karl William Edmark who invented the heart defibrillator, Scott Durchslag, the Chief Operating Officer at Skype, and Dr. John Grunsfeld of NASA and the Hubble Space Telescope. This is the 87th anniversary of the foundation."
Our local club has had this on its calendar for awhile. I like it!
I was a ham until the fateful day when I discovered the internet~
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Amateur Radio has evolved greatly since the early days of having huge receivers and transmitters. Today we have so many different modes - CW, PSK31, APRS, SSB, etc on many different bands with just a transceiver. We can even do satellites and even low power (QRP) operations with a transmitter as small as a tuna can! The best part is meeting people all over the world who share this great hobby. I am excited to see where it goes from here and the technologies it will bring for the future from the individual who has a "homebrew" project to the commercial radio manufacturers and other companies who provide us the "candy" we love to play with!
Today should be celebrated by eating ham for dinner.
Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
I quit BBSes because they only had a range of ~100 miles (the local area code). I was involved in HAM for a while but quit for the same reason. Nowadays with the internet my voice or text can reach the whole world.
My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
de WA1GSF. I haven't been on the air much since 1980, though.
Is that all there are in the USA? I would have expected that to be a much larger number.
(I think I'll forego signing off with my call, cut short one more link in a few three-letter's relational databases)
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
It has been on my geek “bucket list” for many years to get my license. This story and a recent job change are just the motivation I needed to finally do it.
K Man
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=How+can+make+an+FM+radio+transmitter%3F+
Amateur radio seems to be overly restricted in the States. I have little interest trying to participate in a P2P communication system where encryption is explicitly forbidden. Also, the fact my country would prosecute me for communicating internationally with someone who lives under a repressive regime seems totally bogus.
I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
Handles are for CB.
And you still haven't a Slashdot handle.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
Happy ham day.
-- I have a private email server in my basement.
probably more with culture of this country to buy something instead of making your own. Decades ago only big companies and govt agencies had two-way radios, and only the stinking rich had telephones in their cars. But the amateur radio operator had all these because they either built their own or put surplus equipment to have wireless systems two-way conversations and phone calls. Even people that do computers are more in users catagory instead of writing their own code. Yes, it is tough do build your own when wide variety of cheap equipment can easily be obtained from another country. But not a good thing as Richard Elkus points out, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfqKZlMfnX4
mfwright@batnet.com
Thanks for your cogent comments and replies. I LOVE the idea of being able to fix your own electronics (vs buying another). After building an electronic kit you have the ability to detect and fix many obvious electronic problems.
And please any AARL old timers around this thread. Would you help train a novice? Would you support a novice? Myself and others need this.
I guess that explains all the interference with my WiFi and XBee units.
If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
K7DGF here.. Been licensed since 1976, ex-WA6QNW, got the Extra in 1998. Kinda been inactive, due to the Internet. BUT.. I may just get back into it to play around with Gnuradio/SDR/IRLP/EchoLink.. Had no idea there ever WAS an "amateur radio day".. Too bad its not Field Day...
THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
back in after 40 years.
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
Oh, I don't know. Why don't you tweet about it?
Have gnu, will travel.
From the area of Springfield Missouri. Ham since 1990
dot dot dot , dash dash dash , dash , dot dash dot , dot dot dash , dot
Nos Morituri te salutamus