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Re: [CQ-Contest] what else is lost

To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] what else is lost
From: David Gilbert <xdavid@cis-broadband.com>
Date: Sat, 01 Feb 2014 22:57:50 -0700
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>

Things work exactly the opposite, Charlie. I can't think of a single example where a distributed medium (which the internet is) results in less diversity than does a centrally managed one.

The folks here on this reflector aren't the ones "discarding" CQ Magazine ... its subscribers and advertisers (apparently) are. The hard fact is that CQ Magazine is no longer "vibrant" in the least (QST is even less so), and for the most part neither is the hobby it serves. Print media in general costs more than the relative value of the content it provides compared with other alternatives, and you might as well lament the passing of door-to-door milkmen or video rental shops.

Besides, there have been countless ham radio businesses that have disappeared in the last couple of decades and I didn't see anyone willing to subsidize them to keep them alive. I don't see any reason why a magazine should be any different.

Dave   AB7E



On 2/1/2014 8:02 AM, Charles Harpole wrote:
I am happy, like everyone, to see that CQ style contests may continue.
Congrats to the heavy hitters listed on the web site.

BUT, more is lost with the demise of CQ Magazine than contesting:
-alternative voice and view to QST....   just like the TWO newspapers in
cities of old, ham radio benefits from multiple voices... none of which
need be distinctively contending but plurality of ideas, contra web site
censorship, is good for the health of the hobby.

-cohesion and shared experiences and purposes... A group holds together via
shared experiences (the way squads of soldiers are trained) and shared
solving of troubles.  A real tangible magazine can help lots.  A real
magazine is under pressure to offer good, useful, entertaining and
promotional articles;  its goal is to include ideas, not exclude, and sell
to a broad readership.  That is not so true of narrow-topic and closely
censored web sites which live by servicing only those IN the IN group.  A
system that avoids lively debate and diversity will die.

I feel so sorry for those writing here who don't see the value of
continuing these services and simply wish to discard anything the market is
too weak to fully support.  I see no other substitute that will come onto
the Web;  instead there will be even more insular sites, happily
reinforcing each others' opinions while condemning and excluding any
reasoned alternatives.

A civilized society subsidizes the arts, for example, for good reasons.  I
see only good resulting from a subsidized CQ Magazine to help keep vibrant
life in this aging hobby.
73,

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