Very interesting re future plans of ARRL and HAMNET. After a couple years as a
regional appointee in ARES, I got the feeling that the ARRL, FEMA, EM, etc.,
see hams, especially new ones, as an Auxiliary Communications Service for
various government agencies. That must be why ARRL is pushing for wide
digital operation in the CW portions of HF bands.
Unlike when I was involved in ARES 20 years ago, the emphasis is on the
governmental end, it doesn't matter what the operating skill of the Ham is.
Just my take - doesn't have much to do with topic at hand.
John, K4AVX
Date: Wed, 21 May 2014 15:46:47 -0500
From: Stuart Rohre <rohre@arlut.utexas.edu>
To: tentec@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Merger
Message-ID: <537D10B7.2080001@arlut.utexas.edu>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
I just heard a talk, post Dayton, by one of the ARRL vice Directors.
ARRL is hopeful for this merger to work to the benefit of hams, and for
CQ to emerge from its restructuring as a viable magazine. CQ appeals to
a segment of ham radio, (contests) that varies from the ARRL contest
participants with some overlap. But CQ magazine devotes more in their
magazine to their sponsored contests and those of overseas sponsors.
ARRL records show a steady growth in new hams, and League membership
grows as new hams enter the hobby. Recent and younger ham retention is
a big topic at the League, and stimulation of further interest in the
hobby; especially among the young and middle age "Makers" is also a big
topic. The league has an active youth component at each large
convention, with a special subset of their booth devoted to that. It
seemed to be well attended at Ham Com in greater Dallas, (Plano) last year.
The league has furnished seed money to stimulate Broadband Ham Net (tm),
the up and coming digital and microwaves revolution in ham emergency
communications. This is based on Mesh networking, where a spread out
community of hams can provide multiple paths across a city that suffers
phone outages, or overload. Hamnet can simultaneously transmit the ARRL
Handbook text in 2 minutes, while supporting a VOIP phone system and
live video from an incident scene. In other words, it has more
bandwidth,than packet like systems could ever dream of.
That might be a technical area that no commercial manufacturer is
directly serving. Hams are presently cobbling together systems from
other commercial wideband antenna hardware and network boxes such as
Linksys surplus routers. New work and software has appeared for off the
shelf "at the antenna" routers such as the Bullet devices. A vendor who
can serve the ham's questions and package a turn key "Kit"
would be offering something no other ham supplier has attempted.
-Stuart Rohre
K5KVH
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