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512 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1092
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Title: HPR1092: Ham Radio: The Original Tech Geek Passion
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1092/hpr1092.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 18:50:18
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---
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Good morning, good afternoon. Good evening. It is lunch again. Mr. Gadget's coming to you
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over Hacker Public Radio and left they should lose the ownership of the call in line.
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Of course, I have to keep on calling in shows. It's like my deity, right? So, at least
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lunch should come up fairly quickly, fairly quickly after my lesson with I have called
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in the other first show of this year, which was Get Off This Rock. Hopefully you enjoyed
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that one then. I do plan on talking about that kind of thing in the future. So, today,
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I am going to talk a little bit about AM radio, amateur radio. I am an amateur radio operator
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and has been since the very early 90s. And I have had a long term kind of love affair
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with radio and I have always had this kind of desire to become an amateur radio operator.
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And finally, saw that come to fruition there about 20 years ago. As I said, and I talked
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about in some previous episodes here, I got interested in electronics when I was a teenager.
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And primarily, a lot of those first electronic kinds of things were about radio. It was
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building a crystal radio set that was one of the first things that I learned how to build.
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And it was just a wonder to me. I know in today's modern world, with the modern conveniences
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and communications that we have, it seems to be a little bit old fashioned. But it was
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just a wonder to me that I could take just a few components, two or three things. Some
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wire that I literally wound in a coil on an oatmeal canister, a cardboard canister that
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oatmeal, at least in the US, would be delivered in. So, it was a very pretty large diameter
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for inches or so. I don't know what that is, a millimeter, exactly. And I could wind
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a coil there. Some of the wire would need to be there. And a little crystal diode, or
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sometimes even a little piece of germanium and a cap's whisker, it was called. And I could
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position that there, get a little bit of rectification from the diode. And it could then have enough
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power, just to have the AM radio signals, long piece wire connected to one end, and connect
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the right parts of the circuit. No batteries involved, no audio amplifiers or anything. A very
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sensitive set of first I started with a crystal earphone, which was actually the crystal earphone
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earpiece was a little bit bigger than today's ear pieces that had phones that you used to
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use to use the player, but it would fit into your ear. And it was sensitive enough, there
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was enough electricity just to be over the air AM radio signals. So, I have that then
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be rectified into the variations of the radio signal, which is how amplitude modulation
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works. It's varying the strength of the signal. And there was enough power to be generated
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into the circuit with what it could receive over the air to move the little speaker and
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that crystal earphone set, and I could hear the gain radio station. Now, in World War
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II, soldiers would actually make their own cap's whisker radio receivers with rusty
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razor blades. They could take a razor blade, the standard razor blade of the day, not the
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new modern ones with the multiple blades and stuff like that, but the old double-sided
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razor blade, they could take a pulled one from their shaving kit, and the rusty parts of
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it would actually work kind of like the crystal for a crystal radio set, and they could come
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up with cap's whisker, all you need was a little bit of wire, and a little earphone piece
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and they could have a radio that they could listen to. And that just passed made to be.
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And then I started building other kits as I kind of mentioned before. The ultimate kit,
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I think, that I built for the radio shut corporation, which had various types of kits that
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they sold at the time. It came in a plastic box, and then the plastic box itself was the
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perforated board that you would use the plastic top had a bunch of holes in it, and that's
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where you would build your circuit. And the most complex one of those was a shortwave radio
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that I actually built from a kit. And there were lots of other kits, kinds of things,
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heat kit being the most well known of those. And so a lot of things about radio, radio in that
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time frame was the geek fashion. If you were a techie, if you were a geek, the way that you
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expressed your technical geekiness was radio. And this is long before computers actually existed.
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And then a form that any normal even being could actually get a forward one. So the radio
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fascinated me as I said. And Uncle who was into this, and he had those children, so he would tend to
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give presents out to the various, you know, cousins and things like that. He bought me a radio
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that was orphan, I believe it was, that had AEM, FEM, and a couple of shortwave bands. And I
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could listen to those. Back then, the aperture radio operators would also operate with amplitude
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modulation, at least some of them, so I could still listen to those. But along came another method
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of broadcasting the signal, which was called single-side band. AEM radio, as I said, is a variation
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of the power of the signal. And so if you look at that on a device that will allow you to see
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the signal, you would see both sides going and going up and getting smaller, going up and getting
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smaller. It looks like ways. But it would be a mirrored wave at the top and the bottom. Well,
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single-side band only used one side of those. Unfortunately, without the right kind of extra
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equipment, my little shortwave receiver could no longer hear those properly. They found it kind
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of like dust. That kind of reduced my pleasure out of that radio. But that could still
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pick up shortwave radio stations from around the world. And at that point, it was very difficult
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to get a radio amateur license. You had to go to an actual FCC office. There was one in Kansas,
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and it would be in downtown Kansas City somewhere to take the test to the more advanced things. If you
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happen to know someone who was already an amateur radio operator, they could give you what was the
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novice test. In the United States, there's a novice test, which has limited frequency kind of
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privileges. Various privileges up and down the radio spectrum. And then there was a technician class,
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which would give you a little bit extra frequencies you could operate on, general, and then I believe
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beyond that at that time, there was an extra class license. Right now, there is a general
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and advanced and an extra class. There are side classes of license in the United States.
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Another limit extractor back then was the equipment was all crystal controlled because of the
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variances that would occur with the analog equipment. You know, frequencies would vary off
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frequency, and so you would use a crystal to control the frequency of the operation. And novice
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transmitters would always have to be controlled by the frequency. Also, the major limit extractor
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back then was the Morse code requirement for any amateur radio license. So all the amateur radio
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licenses required that you pass a Morse code test. And trying to teach myself Morse code just
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never worked. I got books on it, and I attempted to memorize the bitnaw and dodge it from things
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like that, but it just never really worked for me. It gives CD or C, during the CD radio craze
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in the middle 70s. And ironically, I went to my first jam set in the middle 70s when the micro computer
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revolution came along. It was not because I was an amateur radio operator and interested in the
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radio, but that was the source of a lot of chips and other kinds of components that would use,
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you would use in terms of building your own computer. And so I did attend the local largest amateur
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radio festival, ham sets, used to be in downtown Kansas City at the old downtown airport.
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And we built a new international airport up north of town, and there were still some terminal
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buildings back then, and they would rent those out some various groups. And there was a group in
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the spring that had a big amphibious. And I did attend that once or twice, looking for computer parts.
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So I believe I did pick up a few things. Their amateur slot meets are always an interesting thing,
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because you'll see radios from back in the 1940s and 50s and 60s, even tube radios, because they're
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still very functional for amateur radio purposes. And in fact, there's a lot of people who really
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prefer those tube radios. I mentioned that a lot of amateur radio operators went off because it
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was more efficient for voice communication, but he has started using that single side band. And
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there are in fact other kinds of modes of communications with voice that have come along since then.
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A lot of them had gone back to the old AM radio signal, though, because it sounds so good.
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So there are a few amateur radio operators that have acquired old AM radio transmitters from
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back in the 50s and early 60s, sometimes all the way back to the 40s. Some of them even acquire
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old AM radio transmitters that have been retired by radio stations, and rework the frequencies of
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those chains the coils, and such so that they work on amateur radio frequencies can use those for
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AM radio transmissions to one another. The code requirement that they said always kept me from
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doing that, and never did end up getting an amateur radio license when I was a youth. Then
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computers came along, and I started expressing my electronics interest in those, and that's the
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whole story that I've already told in multiple episodes. A very interesting author who still writes a
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blog that I read a lot of editorials and other kind of articles, was an amateur radio operator,
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and he happened to mention in a column that he wrote that there was a leftening of the requirements
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for the technician class license, and that it was no longer going to require more code.
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So as soon as I heard that his name is Jeff Duncomon, a very interesting chapter was very
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instrumental in some of those early programming days, and wrote a lot of articles on programming,
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which I would follow every time there was a Jeff Duncomon article anywhere, even with
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the editor of some magazines that I read on a regular basis, and that was in one of those editorials.
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That he mentioned this, and so I jumped on it. Got a book, I believe I might have been required
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that from RadioShack, and steadyed up on the test for the technician class license. Found
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a local group that had changed. He didn't have to go to a FCC office now to take the test.
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There were local amateur radio groups that would sponsor tests, and submit those tests if you
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passed them. There were standardized tests that the FCC had, and there was even a way for you
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to study those tests. I found that the Gordon West book, who still acted in amateur radio to
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say, the Gordon West book was the most interesting one for me, because it had an easy way for you to
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go ahead and see the question and the answers to the questions. In such a way that you weren't
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seeing the answers and giving it away to you, but it was fairly easy for you to follow on with
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the questions that were going to be, and there was a question, cool, right, for the technician class
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license, and you could then take the test kind of for yourself, make sure that you have the
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answers. There's various types of information that's included in these tests. There's information
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about the radio regulations, so you understand the types of privileges that you have as a
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broadcaster of radio signals, and how you're not supposed to interfere with television stations and
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radio stations and other uses of the radio frequencies, as well as power requirements and things,
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electronic theory, and good operating practice of your radio stations so that you are working
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in harmony with other radio operators, and so there's various sections of the tests, and I
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passed that, and acquired my no-code text license, it was called by everybody, that was the official name
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of it, but there was a tendency, it kind of reminds me of what's happening now in the computing
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world, especially in mobile devices, to a certain extent with Linux also, but especially with
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mobile devices. There's a certain amount of technical expertise that is involved with
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the radio craft and the Morris code, and don't get me wrong, I have the utmost
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of respect for Morris code operators. There are, unfortunately, they're passing away,
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quite a bit of them, but there are quite a few operators that were especially
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shipment on maybe shifts during World War II, where it was extensively used, but also all the
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military used Morris code for communications, for their military operations, the most efficient way.
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It is still the most efficient way, simplest transmitter, simplest type of receiver,
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and it can get through the static interference kinds of things more efficiently than in the
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other mode of communication to this day. There are several, especially, I'd say, old maybe
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chiefs from the war that can listen to Morris code at 50 words per minute, and type it on a
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typewriter at 50 words per minute. They can actually probably do it as fast through them that,
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and at 40 words per minute, they can actually listen to the Morris code, be typing it on the
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typewriter and have a conversation with you in addition. The key to it is they didn't learn
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Morris code with the Dixon DAW, the way I tried to in my youth teaching myself, they learned the
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sound of the letters. When you start sending Morris code at faster speeds, especially at the speeds
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of 40, 50 plus words per minute, and faster words per minute, like 20 words per minute,
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each letter doesn't become DAW DAW DAW, anymore, or DAW DAW, which have to be a K, or DAW DAW DAW,
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the long symbols you usually say DAW, the shorter symbols you usually say DIT, and DAW DAW DAW
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is O, so DIT, DAW DAW DAW, DIT, DIT, is S, O, S, right? But by the time you start sending it very
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fast, the entirety of the letter has a sound. And your real key is to learn the sound of the
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letter, the pattern of the Dixon DAW, the way they sound all together at a faster pace,
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and that's the way to learn the Morris code. By the time you get up to 40 and 50 words per
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minute, the entire word has a sound to it, a pattern, which they start to recognize, the entire
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word, when it's at that speed. And it's really amazing to this day. I'm not sure about the new
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keyboard that are a full-cwardy keyboard, right? Allah, Blackberry, or a fly-dot keyboard,
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or things like that. But the old P9 keyboards, right? You remember when you used the text and you
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had to press the A multiple times to get to A, B, C. And if you had to press the two multiple
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times, right, to get to C, or to get to D, you had to press the three-one, but get to F, you
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had to press the three times, right? So the old P9 method of texting. And they would have
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contrast between young people who were extremely fast at sending out these text messages, of course,
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because they do it constantly. And 60, 70-year-old Dan sending Morris code at 50 words per minute.
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And the old guys who use the Morris code always learn. They can always send more information
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than the short-of-career to time. This is kind of like talking about bandwidth. I have to be
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driving on UF 50 highlight here in Missouri. And if I had, let's start in the other direction,
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Jan, a few hours, I'd be in St. Louis, Missouri. Okay, one of the fastest bandwidth to get several
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terabytes of data from Kansas City to St. Louis, printed on hard drives. Well, assuming you have
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hard drives that all the data is on, right? Okay, take the hard drives out of the machine,
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move them into the back of a van, driving St. Louis. Right, that's the fastest bandwidth to get those
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terabytes of data to that other position to this day. So it all depends on your point of view,
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right? But you have to have very specialized skills in order to do this. Eventually, as a
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amateur radio operator, of course, once I got my technician license, I started going to Amphus.
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I used to get around with people some of the stuff that was older stuff that I saw and the
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computer parts that I saw when I went to Amphus in the middle 70s, seeing the still be there,
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including all the old computer stuff in the 90s when I started going to Amphus radio Amphus.
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So there are several, we're lucky enough here in the Kansas City area to have several Amphus
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that are spread out throughout the year. And you go to those, you see people that you go,
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you're trying to get to talk to them in real life, and spend it just on the radio and things
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like that. And amateur radio is always an important issue. It's got some reason why it exists for one
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thing. If there was a national emergency, the frequencies that are allocated to amateur radio
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operators within the available to the military if they need extra frequencies, right? So it keeps
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any full-time commercial use to happen with those, and those frequencies would be available
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for governmental use if they were necessary. We're also tasked with experimenting with these things
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technologically, and stretching the technologies that are involved with communications,
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as well as with emergency communications and providing those kinds of services. So those
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are some of the things that the amateur radio service is providing an exchange for all this
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valuable structure. I mean, if you know anything about mobile radios and cellular telephone
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frequencies and things like that, radio spectrum is a very valuable thing, and millions of dollars
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are paid for the usage of radio spectrum. So why are we allowing these people for minimal cost
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of license to use that spectrum? Well, those are some of the reasons why. Now, last you should think
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that getting on a radio and talking to somebody, which still I think is an amazing thing,
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I can throw a piece of wire up into a tree, okay? And I can then using lower power radios that
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I have, but using the proper frequencies that have the ability to broadcast in the short-wave
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spectrum, which can go farther distances. I can talk to somebody with five watts of power,
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okay? Now, I'm not sure exactly what the average telephone nowadays has, but let's say that
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the average telephone to get to the cell tower that has one lot of power. And so that would be
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five times the power that your cell phone has. But with a one wire that I throw up into a tree,
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I can talk to somebody from Missouri that's easily on either coast of the United States
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if the conditions are right. Now, if I have more power, of course, I can more reliably talk to
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people in other places. But if I'm on the right frequencies, I might be talking to somebody in
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Europe or down in the South America. And there are other modes that are even more efficient with
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those low powers. I mean, that's really what I'm kind of interested in and some of the things that
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I still pursue. But let's just think that this kind of technology is no longer affecting your
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lives, okay? And eventually I did learn Morse code once again by learning the sounds of the letters,
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not the dip-bop patterns, but the actual sounds of the letters. I managed to pass the test
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for Morse code and got high frequency times privileges. Now, in the modern day, all of the
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frequency privileges, or most of the westworld, at least I think, the international standards have been
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revised. And it's no longer necessary for you to learn Morse code, even to use the longer
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the longer distance frequencies, the short-wave radio frequencies, what's called high frequency
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radio, HF radio. The high frequencies that we use for mobile sounds is related to walkie-talkies
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or what the M2 radio operator would call handy-talkies now. And those are very high frequency, DHS.
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To give you an idea, just above the AM radio band is really the start of some of the lower
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frequencies that amateur radio operators are allowed to use. But the ones that they use at mostly
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are have wave lengths, and they always talk about these wave lengths in the length of the radio
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waves to make a complete cycle. How long it would move at the speed of life? So that's directly
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related to how long your antenna needs to be. And so there's 116 meters. So it's 116 meters
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for an entire start to zero, goes to a highest point, goes back to zero, goes to its lowest point,
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and goes back to zero again. That's a complete cycle. 160 meters at the speed of life.
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So you would need an antenna that was at least 80 meters long in order to broadcast effectively
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on that. There are ways to get around it, but the laws of physics are bendable but not breakable.
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So yes, you can less efficiently, and you'd have to put more power into it. Use them in camera
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if that was less long than that. So there's a very long piece of wire that you need. But with the
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right length of wire and a very long piece of wire at the right height above the ground, you can
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use less and less power to talk very, very long distances. VHF is starting to get into some of the
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areas that you're more familiar with, and VHF is the amateur frequencies for VHF wire in the 144
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megahertz range, 144 cycles per second. That's a much shorter, but that's the two meter band. So it
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only takes a two-foot length of wire, right, and you'd be bet from the middle in order to
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make a standard antenna for that. And we also have 440, which is the 70-centimeter band.
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So they're getting higher and higher in frequency, shorter and shorter in terms of
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and timmelings that would be necessary. To give you an idea, the 800 megahertz band is what
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initially some of the cordless zones were in. Some cordless zones are in the 2.4 gigahertz range.
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And when we're talking about the types of equipment that you have for Wi-Fi wireless and things
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like that, the 2.4 and the 5 gigahertz range, those are very close to some amateur radio bands that
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are also in effect, but we have lower frequency bands, which are more efficient. But anything that
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is in those very high frequency and above ranges are very short ranges for the duration. It's very
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similar to FM radio. FM radio in the United States, and I thank you internationally also,
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it's very close to this. Spacing a part of channels, maybe for the different regions of the
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world, but the frequencies are very similar. FM radio goes from about 85 megahertz to 108 megahertz.
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So that's just a little bit below the VHL kind of range that we're talking about for amateur radio
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operators. And in that particular case, and I don't know if you've noticed about your FM radio station,
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you can't hear your FM radio station very far out of the city that it would get resolved.
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You can only hear that because it's a line of sight communication. If you remember
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independent say, right, they're explaining line of sight communication and the president
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understands those because he was an aircraft pilot, supposedly before the king resident,
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and so he understood line of sight. So line of sight means that the frequencies essentially
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travel like light at that particular point. There's nothing that's able to bend to them,
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and therefore they just keep on going straight in whatever direction they were going when they
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first came from the transmitter. And so because of the curvature of the earth, they would go straight
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out into space, and you will only be able to see and hear those, and definitely hear those radio
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frequencies, as if you could see the transmitter. Now, it's too far away for you to see the lights
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on the transmitter, but the radio frequencies will travel straight, and once you go beyond the
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horizon, because of the curvature of the earth, you would no longer be able to hear that radio station.
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That's not the way AM radio works, especially at night, there's certain AM radio stations. Have
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you ever noticed your local AM radio station probably reduces its power at night. So a radio station
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you can hear perfectly well during the day, when some say it reduces its power, but there are
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certain radio stations that boost their power, and you can hear radio stations from a long way
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away at night. One reason they do this is because the propagation of the radio waves down in that
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spectrum, that is used by AM radio, which is in the kilohertz range, not the Menderhertz range,
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that's a much longer traveling signal, and at night, the conditions for that to travel farther,
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there's various reasons why. It bounces off the ionosphere of the planet, and bounces back
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down again, so it doesn't just go off in the space and keep on going. There's various reasons why it
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bounces down again. Likewise, there are other kinds of atmospheric conditions and things like that
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that can cause the radio waves to actually go up, bounce off conditions under the atmosphere
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and come back down to Earth again, and sometimes I make multiple hots. That's the reason why I can
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use very little power and talk to somebody who's hundreds or even thousands of miles away
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with my piece of wire up in the tree, when I'm using those lower frequencies, the HF fans.
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That's why the AM radio station in the United States here, there's always a high-flower
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station that would take Louis Missouri, as you could look to at night, another one out of New Orleans,
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or somewhere down there in Louisiana, out of Chicago, there's a few particular stations
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across the AM radio dial that would boost their signals at night, and then you could listen to them,
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but you only be able to give them a night. You wouldn't be able to give them during the day,
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and the conditions at night are even more so towards getting that long distance kind of communication.
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This kind of communication is still benefiting you right to this day. The amateur radio operators
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are the ones who came up with a way to go beyond this line of sight problem with VHS.
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Back in the early 70s, somebody came up with the idea of, hey, what if we put a receiving station
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way high up on a tower, either on a mountain, if we have to have mountains,
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they're up on the tallest building that we'll let us do it, and we'll have a little receiving
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station, though, received at such a such a megahertz, and then we'll read ridecast it on another
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transmitter that has another antenna, and it'll be just far enough away in megahertz that it
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won't interfere, so we'll be able to use a little small individual like walkie-talkie kind of radio,
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and as long as it's got enough power to be heard by that first antenna up on top of the building,
|
|
or up on top of the tower, or the mountain side, and then it'll read ridecast with a stronger signal
|
|
out, and since it's so high, we'll get better line of sight, and so now I'll be able to
|
|
talk even farther, because I'm effectively changing the rules about line of sight by putting
|
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the receiving antenna, and the transcending antenna way up high, and so they started experimenting
|
|
with this, and figured out how to make it better and better and better, and eventually there is a
|
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network of repeater towers across the entire US, and in fact in every major area of the world,
|
|
there are repeating towers, there are use for radio communications for commercial purposes,
|
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this is the basis for all of the radio communications that are used by police and fire,
|
|
and essentially this is the very start, the little baby steps towards the cell songs that you have
|
|
in your pocket are scrapped to your belt right now. So essentially, amateur radio operators,
|
|
you talk about there's a lot of this whole talk in the technical world about patents,
|
|
and invalidating patents, because who did it first, and who copied who, and things like that?
|
|
So I'm not going to get into that right now, I may do that on a future show, but I'll tell you one
|
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thing, you wouldn't have a cell phone, you know, the size that it is in your hand,
|
|
and you might even be listening to this very podcast on some kind of mobile device,
|
|
and that would not exist without the amateur radio operators who developed the first technologies
|
|
and proved that those technologies would work, and then they were commercialized in the
|
|
revolutionized radio communication around the world. In fact, I'll often joke, you know, back in
|
|
high school, if I had a handy talk to you on my belt, I would be the biggest nerd around,
|
|
but the one real clue to me that the nerds have won, right, is not just that it's the technical
|
|
people that are the richest people in the world now, not the football players who don't play
|
|
professional football, who don't happen to go on to professional sports and things like that,
|
|
it's not the high school quarter, right, who goes on LSEs, the salesman for a technical company,
|
|
it's the Bill Gates of the World, right, it's the Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs of the World,
|
|
it's the Gates, right, that I've taken over the world, the revenge of the nerds, if you will,
|
|
and the trigger range of the nerds in my mind is everybody essentially walks around with a
|
|
handy copy on their belt, if they've got a built clip, and some of them even have push-to-talk buttons,
|
|
right, remember the whole push-to-talk in cell phones? It's essentially just using the, now,
|
|
their digital communication, instead of just simple FM communication, like cell phones initially
|
|
work, but it was all based on that kind of technology. So the kind of things that the amateur radio
|
|
operators are doing still to this day are spreading communications, kinds of things,
|
|
expanding those kinds of things. Another thing that's happening in the up-terrated community,
|
|
light, as I'm thinking right now, is the weather conditions here, if you're outside the U.S.,
|
|
you probably love the weather, just, although it might have made some international broadcasts
|
|
also last year, at least here in the middle of the country, we had too much water. We have a lot of
|
|
rain, and in addition to that, we had a lot of snowfall over the winter, and that then knelt
|
|
it off and came down through the rivers, and we had flooding. It was a terrible time with flooding
|
|
of the Missouri River System and the upper Mississippi River System here in the United States,
|
|
which is a big part of the farming community, are all tied to that, and a lot of those fields
|
|
did not produce the grains that they normally would because of the flooding conditions.
|
|
And there were major highways that were closed, et cetera, et cetera. We have the exact
|
|
offices of that this year. We have drought conditions. They've had some drought conditions down
|
|
in Texas that have been going on for multiple years, but now the entirety of the great claims
|
|
is in drought conditions, as well as up in the mountains, because we did not have as much snow,
|
|
and there's a peculiar kind of thing that's a waste problem medical, and in fact,
|
|
Mizzoula, Montana, where my youngest daughter has pursued a master's degree up there
|
|
at the University of Montana there in Mizzoula, Gil Grizzly. Right near her house, right next to the
|
|
airports that I flowed in and out of to visit them, and some visit tips and things like that,
|
|
is the station where all of the people who are far jumpers actually train, and they fly out of that
|
|
to actually parachute out of airplanes, talking about, you know, one thing, it's one thing to
|
|
parachute out of a perfectly good airplane. It's quite another thing to parachute out of
|
|
a perfectly good airplane. When you know there's a fire down there, and you're going to be
|
|
fighting it, and basically they fight those hearts by containing them, and clearing out brush,
|
|
and making sure that be far to not jump from one tree to the net by moving dirt, and clearing
|
|
up brush, et cetera, et cetera. And there are several fires that have started, this is a
|
|
totally natural phenomenon. In fact, there are trees that actually exist, that will not,
|
|
their seeds will not germinate, and left a fire occurs. The actual seed pod will not break open,
|
|
right, unless there's a fire, and that's what causes the seed pod to break open, and thusly there's
|
|
a possibility of growing a new tree. So it's not like fires like this aren't natural occurrences,
|
|
then they are not by and large, caused by man, they are by and large caused by lightning strikes.
|
|
And there's a severe problem with some fires that are moving out of control in Colorado,
|
|
in the Rocky Mountains there, in the Dideraria Boulder, and things like that, and even north of that,
|
|
I believe, up into Fort Collins, and down in Colorado Springs area, and then all the way down
|
|
to Flagstaff in Northern Arizona. And there are several fires at various points there.
|
|
There are outdoor radio operators that are there working in conjunction with the firefighters.
|
|
Maybe we're not right on the front line with those guys that parachute down on the tree,
|
|
but have the forward command post. And they're there with amateur radio positioning systems,
|
|
a precursor to GPS, right? GPS based, the GPS system that you have in your car, amateur radio
|
|
operators started doing that with amateur frequencies, and they not only take the GPS signal,
|
|
but they also broadcast back their positions. We have amateur radio repeaters for high frequency
|
|
kinds of frequencies with digital notes, and they can be there with equipment that will then give
|
|
exact position of where the fire is being fought at any given time, and those positions can be fed
|
|
back to the control areas for the firefight, so that they have a more accurate picture of exactly
|
|
what the fires, shape, and physical severity of the fire is. In fact, I just heard a story about
|
|
amateur radio operators that were called in for a fire that was in Boulder. The amateur radio
|
|
operators came to the fire and not only set up the BPRS and other kinds of digital communications
|
|
into the system, they also set up amateur television, right, which would use some of the
|
|
higher frequencies, like 440 megahertz, 900 megahertz, instead of those. You bright-cast
|
|
television pictures of the fire, so they could get a live feed in the master control
|
|
that was in charge of that emergency situation, and they could have big-screen live views of what
|
|
was happening with the fire. The federal government came in because this was still at the state and
|
|
county level, and if the fire stays below a certain size, it will not then fall under the
|
|
purview of the National Forest Service, I suppose, or other kinds of emergency things that
|
|
happen at the federal level. They came in when that was still at the E2 size, that severity of the
|
|
fire was not sufficient to warrant them being involved, but they wanted to check the situation out.
|
|
They came into the control center, saw the live big-screen TV feet of the fire,
|
|
went out, and visited the sites where the amateur television stations were broadcasting this live
|
|
feed back to the control, and we're not aware that this kind of technology was even available,
|
|
that amateur radio operators could provide this type of service, and requested specifically,
|
|
if this got to an E1 status, and thanked the higher power, right?
|
|
Thank God, or whatever else you want. The universal consciousness, whatever, it did not.
|
|
It stayed at a smaller scale, and it's not going to be spreading to actually have an even wider
|
|
situation where the athletes fight this fire, but if it had gotten to that E1 classification,
|
|
and had spread, they specifically requested that the amateur radio operators remain available,
|
|
and provide them with the larger service. And I have mentioned that other fires now are going to
|
|
start having these live feed, and other emergencies are going to start having these live feed.
|
|
When things like tornadoes happen, floods happen, other things like that. Amateur radio operators
|
|
go into those areas and set up temporary cell towers so that things can provide communications
|
|
for that, temporary communications, and can provide information in and out of those disaster areas,
|
|
until such time as infrastructure can be restored, and normal communications can then present.
|
|
So if there is a flood, if there is a fire, there's emergency, Italy. So they have that recent
|
|
set of earthquakes there in Northern Italy, outside of Milan by 700 kilometers. They're in
|
|
Tuscany, I believe, that I may not be the right area, but somewhere there in Northern Italy,
|
|
and it was a relatively rural area. There was not a lot of communications in the first place,
|
|
and the occurrence of that earthquake had completely knocked out all communications to the area,
|
|
amateur radio operators from various places there in Northern Italy were requested to go in.
|
|
They went in and set up equipment so that emergency communications and health and welfare,
|
|
right, is my family okay? That kind of thing is digital, as well as waste communications could
|
|
be established to get to the nearest city of any size that still had communications, which was,
|
|
I think, something like 80 kilometers away, if I'm wrong or very incorrectly. So amateur radio
|
|
operators provide that kind of disaster communication, and they volunteer to do this.
|
|
Whatever county you live in, especially if you're in any major area, there is probably
|
|
an emergency communications group of amateur radio operators who are ready, willing,
|
|
and able to provide these kinds of communications to your community if a disaster takes place.
|
|
Now, some things that you might be of interest, that same radio that I talked about that I could
|
|
actually use to talk to someone with only five watts of power. Some of the things I used to do
|
|
with that radio when I was doing this, but I'm getting ready to get more radioactive like this,
|
|
again, is I could use a digital form that all you need to do with a computer and some software,
|
|
and this is available in all the different operating systems. You can even do this with
|
|
tablet PCs and things like that via ILS-based, you know, an iPad or a Android version of that.
|
|
There are digital nodes that essentially use the sound card of your PC and the display of your
|
|
PC, your laptop or your tablet, and you have a special cable that plug into the radio,
|
|
and you go on to these HF bands, so we're talking about longer range communications here,
|
|
but tiny amounts of power, right? Very small amounts of power, but a big, long piece of wire
|
|
up high into three, and I would sit on my deck at night, throw a piece of wire up into the tree,
|
|
and hook it up to my radio, hook my laptop up to that, and you'll literally see the frequency.
|
|
You can hear them over the speaker of the PC. You can hear the little warbling sounds.
|
|
Kind of reminds me of the old days with modems. If you remember,
|
|
what the modems sounded like, a little bit more musical and a little bit less jarring
|
|
than the old modem tones. But you can hear these tones of signals over the radio,
|
|
and you can literally see them. There'll be multiple signals that are little lines that are
|
|
going up the screen. It's kind of like the matrix only in reverse. They go from the bottom of
|
|
the screen to the top. And you move this little pointer over to one of those strong signals,
|
|
and all of a sudden, a little space there that's available on the user interface on your PC
|
|
didn't start showing you the text that the person on the other end of the conversation
|
|
is typing in on their computer with similar types of equipment. And I said,
|
|
in my backyard, or down at a vacation cabin that belongs to my father,
|
|
and on a pleasant summer evening with nothing but a piece of wire thrown into the air and a
|
|
minuscule amount of power on my laptop and type messages back and forth to people down in
|
|
the South America, across the entire United States and Canada, once or twice, even all the way over
|
|
into Europe. Over the air, we talk about Ethernet now. You know, in the early days of radio,
|
|
one theory about how radio work was, there was this thing that proposed that was the ether.
|
|
There was some kind of magical substance that was the reason why that these things transferred
|
|
from place to place. Ethernet kind of gives its name from that old hypothesized mythical ether,
|
|
right? That was the way that these things. But you're really communicating across ether. You're
|
|
communicating wirelessly to somebody in another state, another country, another continent.
|
|
If you don't think that's cool, you don't have to do it. You'll benefit from the various ways
|
|
that we will improve that as amateur radio operators and improve communications.
|
|
Last bit before I part with you here on this particular episode is there are organizations for
|
|
each country that license the amateur radio operator. There are probably different classifications
|
|
of licenses for your particular country. I do know, happen to know, that the radio society is great
|
|
written, that is the people who handled that kind of thing and would be the people you get in
|
|
contact with about getting a license if you're in the UK. Here in the US, the primary group that
|
|
regulates it, of course, is the federal communications commission. The radius site is great
|
|
written, it's not the regulatory group, but they're the primary group of amateur radio operator
|
|
at the organization that represents them. So they can tell you information about probably
|
|
have studying materials for the test that would be appropriate there for the UK. Whatever country
|
|
you're in, there would be an appropriate group probably that would provide you those kinds of
|
|
things. In America, that's called the American Radio Relay League, and actually that relay
|
|
in that happens to refer to the old days when there was very low power involved, and amateur
|
|
radio operators would actually receive a message to one person and then relay it onto the next person.
|
|
So they would actually pass messages along and relay those, that's where the relay leak
|
|
actually comes from. This is from a very, very, very, very low power days of amateur radio
|
|
operations. There's W-5-Y-I, provides some testing. If you have a radius extort near you,
|
|
I would highly recommend some of the studying materials that are there. Make sure in the US,
|
|
I'm sure it's the same for all of the countries involved, but I happen to know more about the US.
|
|
There's always a set of question pools, and eventually they change those questions. They
|
|
refine the test and change some of the questions. So make sure you're getting a book that is the
|
|
current book for whether we're licensed class. You probably want to start out with a technician's class,
|
|
license, and then move on from there. There's probably a group not too far away for you that could
|
|
offer to do the testing for you. They usually do testing like this at the hampsest, so there's
|
|
probably a hampsest that wouldn't be too far with drive away from you. I happen to drive to
|
|
a hampsest that was not too far about so 40 miles from my house in a little town called Warnsburg
|
|
Missouri. It's a small regional hampsest that's close enough to the area that a lot of people
|
|
can't sit and come out there. I might comment sometime in the future about amateur radio and
|
|
what it was like to go to that, but that was a little bit of a reminder to be about amateur radio.
|
|
It's something that I'm kind of rekindlingly interested in, and
|
|
thrusting off some radios, requiring a little bit of new equipment and
|
|
going to get more radio active right now. Right now is a good time to be an amateur radio operator
|
|
because the sunspot cycle is up, and when the sunspot cycle is up, it helps in some of those
|
|
propagation of those radio waves to be able to talk around the world for longer distances
|
|
with higher frequencies. And of course, the higher the frequency, the easier it is to build
|
|
in antenna because it's shorter, and so that makes it for a more beneficial situation if you have
|
|
limitations in what the size of your canvas can be. And that's a cycle that's like an 11-year cycle.
|
|
So eventually we'll get them to a trough, and then the 11-year for now will be close to the
|
|
top of the cycle again. So we happen to be close to the top of the cycle now, and it's kind of
|
|
an 11-year cycle that the sunspots work. So look forward to any comments about this. Are there any
|
|
other amateur radio operators out there? I'm going to have the public radio crowd. If you're
|
|
interested in some of the digital modes and things like that, be sure to leave some comments.
|
|
You can always leave comments to me, right, at Hacker Public Radio, or HPR, either one,
|
|
at Mr. Gadgets, that's m-r-g-a-d-g-e-t-s.com. And I welcome any chronic comments about
|
|
any of the episodes that I eat here, or you could go over even and go to Mr. Gadgets.com.
|
|
And that's basically just my blog spot blog, but you could Twitter me on Mr. Gadgets,
|
|
right, on Twitter. I'm also Mr. Gadgets, I believe we get to be on Google Plus, or I am Bruce Bar,
|
|
right? And so you can get to be there on Google Plus. See some comments, Jimmy, either on the comments
|
|
on the HPR blog, or for this episode, or get to me, get in touch with me, some of those other
|
|
glaze. Let me know what you think. If you're interested in amateur radio kinds of things, radio
|
|
transmitters, things like that, we can certainly talk about those more. But it's certainly an
|
|
interesting geeky hobby, and it kind of meshes with the communications capabilities. This is a
|
|
way for you to be able to communicate even when Twitter is down, and your high speed internet
|
|
is down. You can still communicate with people, and if an emergency takes place, you probably
|
|
aren't going to have high speed internet. And your self-tower is probably not going to work either.
|
|
But there are modes that you can actually use to communicate, and you can serve your community
|
|
in helping out if Lord for God paid disaster should take place. So for now, the way we would say
|
|
that in amateur radio parlance, I'll say 73, which in Morris Code is a mirror image of one
|
|
another. The DIT and DAW pattern for the seven, and the DIT and DAW pattern for the three,
|
|
are an exact mirror image, right? The DIT for DAWs and the DAWs are DITs. And so that is how you
|
|
would sign off a CW transmission. You would say 73, the E, which means from A, B, 0, Y, O,
|
|
which is my amateur radio call sign. And we often use it's hard sometimes to hear what the
|
|
letters are. So we use words, which is the first letter of the word, right, represents the letter.
|
|
So that would be alpha, bravo, zero, Yankee, Oscar. This goes all the way back to military.
|
|
And the military guys would have a coding system that would indicate what the letters of the
|
|
alphabet are, and they would spell them out by using the words. So 73, D, E, A, B, 0, Y, O,
|
|
and we hope to talk to you in the not-to-distant future. And maybe even on the air.
|
|
And until then, be careful out here on the table, lots of a frontier, whether it's using
|
|
radio waves or Ethernet tables or cell phones. Always remember, if you're talking to somebody else,
|
|
it just happens to be they're not in the room with you. Bye now.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio where Hacker Public Radio does our
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital.Pound and the Infonomicum Computer Club.
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HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com. All binref projects are crowd-responsive
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by lunar pages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your
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hosting needs. Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative comments,
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a tribute show, share a life, details on life's needs.
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