[BARC-List] During Blackout, Ham Radio Shined

Rick Hampton [email protected]
Thu, 21 Aug 2003 12:53:50 -0400


Gang,



Please be on the lookout for any articles of this ilk and forward them to
me.  (Arthur, thanks for sending the New York Times articles.)  I'm using
them to push the "Hams in Hospitals" ideas.  Everyone I'm dealing with still
believes in the program, but economy/budget issues are postponing
implementation and I don't want to loose any headway.  By the way, link #1
is the really good one.



Thanks,



Rick Hampton, WD8KEL

Wireless Communications Manager

Partners Healthcare Systems

Boston, MA



Phone: 617-726-6633

Cell: 671-968-2262



P.S.  I'm sitting in an empty house in Charlotte as I type this.  My family
will FINALLY be making the move up there this weekend to be with me.  Don't
be surprised if you start hearing Beth, KG4GMJ, Kara, KG4GVS and Matt,
KG4QKX on the radio more often.  (Not surprisingly, 2 meters and 440 are
better links between my office in Charlestown and Londonderry, NH where we
will be living for at least the next year, than cell phones.)



-----Original Message-----

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]

Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2003 6:35 AM

To: Hampton, Rickey L.

Subject: [Slashdot] Stories for 2003-08-21



+--------------------------------------------------------------------+

| During Blackout, Ham Radio Shined                                  |

|   from the breaker-breaker dept.                                   |

|   posted by timothy on Tuesday August 19, @23:52 (wireless)        |

|   http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/08/19/2223242              |

+--------------------------------------------------------------------+



[0]Mark Cantrell writes "An interesting bit on [1]AP through Yahoo today.
Seems that ham radio (which recently had a bit of [2]backlash here on
Slashdot from a few people thinking it was useless, outdated technology),
really shined through during the blackouts. When the power went, ham radio
operators, using battery backup power, were able to help coordinate
emergency workers while the cell phone networks were overloaded. For anyone
wondering why [3]interference due to power line broadband is considered a
bad thing, well, there ya go."



Discuss this story at:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=03/08/19/2223242



Links:

  0.. http://www.nwinfo.net/~mcantrell/
  1..
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=528&ncid=528&e=1&u=/ap/20030819/ap_on_hi_te/blackout_ham_radio
  2.. http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?cid=6651327&sid=74100&tid=193
  3.. http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2003/08/08/2/?nc=1