Fellows, I am in the middle of a philistine discussion that mistakenly
valorizes the new and the trendy. Some other magazine, but unlikely a Web
site, could take this discussion up. However, I am going back to my
library, read some paper books, use an incandescent light bulb or the sun,
listen to a human being play a real piano, eat some organically grown
strawberries, wear my all cotton clothes and animal skin shoes, and enjoy
thinking for myself. Later, I will use legacy technology, radio, to play
with. 73, and C U in the past, Charly
On Sun, Feb 2, 2014 at 12:57 PM, David Gilbert <xdavid@cis-broadband.com>wrote:
>
> 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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>
--
Charly, HS0ZCW
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