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There's a need for more people out here to help out with the emergency communications network, so I'm currently studying for my amateur radio license.
Is there anybody here that's a ham operator? If so, why did you get into it and what do you use it for?
Posts: 16551 | Registered: Feb 2003
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posted
I have my license, but I haven't been active in years. Two of my kids also have licenses, one more advanced than me (and one will be soon). The youngest didn't pass the last time, but she probably will within the year.
I got mine because just after the 1994 Northridge quake, my then-spouse volunteered to help, and ended up being the emergency communication for a hospital whose phones were down. I went along, and I thought that was pretty cool. Until kids made it too difficult, we were both members of a local group affiliated with the Beverly Hills PD.
He's still very active as a ham. I'm sure he'd be happy to tell you all about it if you'd like.
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How many Jewish people with ham radio licenses do you know? Now, how many do you suppose I might know?
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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I have a license. But I haven't been on in a long time. I was licensed when I was about 12, and got it because everyone else in my family is licensed.
My father is the only active ham in my family, obsessed with DStar and other things ham radio.
Edit: Removed the call sign, 'cause I don't want to get a freaky hatrack stalker. They're more scary than your run of the mill stalker.
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Reminder: if you know someone's call sign, you can look up their full legal name and last known address with great ease. Those of you who are not as paranoid as I am may not care . . .
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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posted
I've got mine, but I've not been active, well, ever, really. My dad's huge into it and let me listen in when he'd try to talk to people in Russia or wherever, and I got my license so I could apply for some scholarships, figuring (rightly, as it turned out) that no one else in my school would be competing for those.
My dad's still huge into it, though. He keeps threatening to give me a radio and take away my cell phone.
Posts: 3932 | Registered: Sep 1999
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Rivka, you're right. But it not only gives his address, but how long he's had his license, the year he was born, and the fact that 63 other people have already looked him up.
Posts: 1215 | Registered: Apr 2005
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Good deal for you, Porter. Most hand-helds cost considerably more than the average cell phone (although probably about the same as a high-end one).
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Boon
unregistered
posted
A thread I know stuff about! Woot!
I am an amateur radio operator. I've had my license since 2005. My husband got his first, to help with emergency management functions for our town. I got mine because it seemed like a good idea for backup communications for our fmaily. Remember what happened to cellphones in NY immediately following 9/11 and in NO after Katrina?
Truth is, we could function just fine without cellphones. Everything we do regularly we can do with radios. I key up to tell him I'm on my way home from work, he asks for milk, we chat about our day...
The only thing you have to really remember is that anyone in range of your signal could be listening, so turn down your power as much as possible and keep it to subjects you wouldn't mind your whole church congregation knowing about.
We have a Yaesu FT-7800R at the house hooked up to an Astron RS20A power supply, the same radio in the car I drive every day to work, and a couple of HT's. I'll gladly answer questions by email, or I'll check back in here next weekend.
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What an interesting steam-punk-esque story idea...alternative history where the Internet is done via Ham Radio...No pictures, but you'd have Ham-Chat, Ham-Wiki, Ham-Google?, Ham-Hackers.
Have to think about that.
Posts: 1941 | Registered: Feb 2003
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quote:There can be pictures in ham radio. It's called ATV, or amateur television.
There's also SSTV, or slow-scan TV, which transmits one image about every 8 seconds.
I don't know much about them, but there have been data protocols over the ham waves for quite a long time. Some of the early ones weren't much more than teletype, but they have TCP/IP over ham now.
Posts: 16551 | Registered: Feb 2003
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posted
I've decided that I'm going to take both the Technician and General tests on Monday (if I don't take the test on Monday, I'll have to wait almost 2 months for another chance, and I'm impatient). I went through the ARRL book for the technician test, and that one should be a piece of cake.
Unfortunately, I don't have a good study guide for the General test. I'm trying to pick up what I can from various sources on the net, and I should be able to pass it, but it's really not optimal. Does anybody know of have a good online (and free!) study guide?
Posts: 16551 | Registered: Feb 2003
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Morse code is no longer a requirement for any of the amateur radio licenses currently issued by the FCC.
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