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Do You Still Find Amateur Radio Interesting? 205

Marcos Eliziario asks: "Soon, I'll be taking the exams for a Brazilian, Class-D, Ham Radio license (Equivalent to an American Technician License) and, as I was reading about the subject, I wondered what today's geek thinks about amateur radio. In the past, Ham Radio was very popular among nerds, however with the Internet boom it seems that interest on radio, among the younger generations, is becoming dimmer each day. A lot of cool things can be done with radio, like building your own equipment, digital modes (btw, few people know that Packet Radio was born on the amateur's rank), and long distance contacts. The gear is cool, there's a lot of things to be learned about propagation, and today's Hams even use satellites to talk. Do you think that we could see a renaissance of Ham Radio among 21st century techies?"
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Do You Still Find Amateur Radio Interesting?

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  • by Soong ( 7225 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2006 @10:31PM (#15398808) Homepage Journal
    Once upon a time I learned morse and passed the novice, tech and tech plus tests. Then I got into computers and the internet and a zillion other things. It probably would have been easy for me to renew my license to as good or better status given the easing of the tests, but I never got around to it. I still have my radios but the batteries are dead and probably won't even hold a charge anymore. Radio is still a curiosity, but not something I've chosen to spend time on.
  • Depends... (Score:3, Funny)

    by Opusnbill7 ( 442087 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2006 @10:34PM (#15398810)
    Depends.... Some of us might find that stuff interesting, but don't know who to turn to to "try it out". That, and the cost of entry is so high (equipment, putting up an antenna [which you can't even do if you have an apt. probably]) that it really is hard to "get started". As unfortunate as it may be, Ham radio may be in a bit of a downward spiral unless it can figure out a way to make it accessible and seem relevant to the younger generation.
  • Yes! (Score:2, Funny)

    by SaDan ( 81097 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2006 @10:52PM (#15398904) Homepage
    I still find amatuer... Oh, wait. RADIO. Not pr0n.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 24, 2006 @10:56PM (#15398923)
    Mike: Hi, folks. Mike Nelson here. Crow and Servo are about to help me with the annual Satellite of Love safety check. You guys ready?
    Crow: Roger.
    Servo: Ramjet.
    Mike: All right, fire extinguishers?
    Servo: Empty.
    Crow: Shot them off in your face. Next.
    Mike: Okay. Flare gun?
    Servo: Ibid.
    Crow: Shot them off in your face. Next.
    Mike: Right. First aid kit?
    Servo: Used it to treat your flare burns.
    Mike: Right. Parachute?
    Crow: Gym class.
    Mike: Okay, life vest?
    Servo: Falsies.
    Mike: HAM radio?
    Crow: Mistook it for an actual ham.
    Mike: There. The Satellite of Love is completely unsafe. Hey, does anything work at all?
    Servo: Yeah, the toaster oven. We used it to bake the HAM radio.
    Crow: Mmm.
    Mike: Okay, well then, we're dead. We'll be right dead.
    Crow: C'mon, Mike. We're gonna go stick our heads in the towel dispenser!
    Servo: Whee!
  • Re:Radio? (Score:4, Funny)

    by heptapod ( 243146 ) <heptapod@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 24, 2006 @11:37PM (#15399091) Journal
    Wow, that sounds a lot like everyone's experience with Linux.
  • Re:Yes. (Score:2, Funny)

    by harmgsn ( 612057 ) on Thursday May 25, 2006 @12:40AM (#15399322) Homepage
    LOL. Sure... the "cool" people ;) 73 N0RSE

Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

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