One of the great things about doing ham radio in a park like this is the endless stream of kids that come up to ask you what you are doing.
"ARE YOU MAKING A TIKTOK?"
"WHAT DO YOU MEAN NO INTERNET"
"HOW IS THIS TALKING TO JAPAN"
Invariably the parents are as interested, but it's always the kids that are uninhibited enough to ask.
Cascadia Radio is a free, online community of Pacific Northwest amateur radio operators. Cascadia Radio was created out of a desire to help organize regional amateur radio events and stay in touch with people in a modern way. Cascadia Radio does not intend to be a traditional Amateur Radio Club, nor replace the many excellent and established clubs in the area.
@K7PJP It's the best: https://roskosch.de/sdr-control-ios/
Same dev has a bunch of other mac ham stuff for SDR ham radios. That software availability was a major factor in my selection of the 705.
Is one still required to learn Morse to get a ham license?
@quantensalat @ethanschoonover
Oh, boo!
(I contend that knowing Morse constitutes a basic survival skill, since it is simple and entirely medium agnostic.)
(I do not, personally, know Morse. On my list of Things To Learn Someday Real Soon Now When I Have Time.)
@quantensalat @ethanschoonover
Not unrelated: are building crystal radios still a thing? That seems like that would be a good stone-knives-&-bearskins skill to have, too.
@quantensalat @ethanschoonover
‼️ ⁉️
No, I have not! This ventures into actual literal "stone knives" territory, & would be Very Cool.
Attached: 1 image Things to do with a block of pyrite you bought at the museum shop #physics #electronics
@quantensalat @ethanschoonover
Cool!!
@K7PJP @quantensalat @ethanschoonover
Isn't ham radio a standard fall-back communication channel when the more elaborate/highly technical communications infrastructures (telephone, television, internet) go down? (In disaster stories, at least?)
As to gatekeeping, I can certainly see where that could be the case. I've only encountered ham in third-hand, annecdotal form, so I'm not familiar with the culture.
::sigh:: My initial point was "Morse is cool, and I'm sad it's not being taught anymore."
Not engaging with this any further, because I'm not in a mood to be scolded by someone I wasn't even talking to about a topic entirely tangential to my original question.
@cavyherd Plenty of hams are learning it, voluntarily and after they get licensed! I'd like to myself one of these days. I hope you consider getting licensed and we can make a contact someday!
I would love to get licensed someday. But that ambition is going to have to get in line behind thirty-eleven other ambitions ::sigh::
Which I guess makes a certain amount of sense: better to have a robust Ham network than be fussy about comparatively arcane skills.
But it offends my boyscout nature. (Not that I've cleaved to that principle myself personally, of course 😂)