[GreenKeys] NPR: Amateur Radio is growing...
Don Robert House
K9TTY at dls.net
Tue Apr 6 00:47:59 EDT 2010
The word amateur is often used as meaning not professional, the actual
meaning is closer to unpaid. Even more interesting is the derivation of
the word which originally meant "to love"
I still have not figured out where HAM came from...
ON NPR...
Only a few years ago, blogs listed ham radio alongside 35 mm film and
VHS tape as technologies slated to disappear.
They were wrong.
Nearly 700,000 Americans have ham radio licenses — up 60 percent from
1981, a generation ago. And the number is growing.
Ham radio will never have the sex appeal of the iPhone, but it does
have a certain nerd appeal, says Allen Weiner, an analyst at the
technology research firm Gartner.
"If it creates its own experience, that's really what's key here," he
says. "If it just emulates an experience that you can get online,
it's not going to grow."
Newcomers to ham radio include Helen Schlarman, 89, who has a
compact, two-way radio in her home in suburban St. Louis. She looks
up a friend across town by pushing the talk button, announcing the
letters and numbers of his call sign (W-0-S-J-S), and then announcing
her own (W-0-A-K-I).
Steve Schmitz's voice crackles through Schlarman's radio.
"Hi Helen, how you doing, W-0-S-J-S?" he says, ending his response
with his own call letters.
Many "hams," as they're known, hang postcards from global contacts on
their walls, the way hunters show off deer antlers, but Schlarman's
chats are mostly local. She says this hobby is perfect for an
outgoing person who spends a lot of time inside.
"It's a different community," she says. "There [are] no stereotypes
of age; it's just talking and sharing and enjoying."
Until recently, ham radio was declining as older operators died. Then
the Federal Communications Commission phased out the Morse code test
that many saw as a stumbling block to getting a license. Last year
more than 30,000 new applicants signed up to become ham radio
operators, according to Maria Somma, an official with the American
Radio Relay League.
At a ham radio convention near St. Louis, the crowd swapping antenna
parts and other equipment is mostly male, and over 50. But
15-year-old Jonathan Dunn is attending along with his father. He says
Facebook and texting are fun, but making friends using a $200 radio
that doesn't come with monthly fees is more rewarding.
"With ham radio you can talk to new people, all kinds of ages, races,
and it's just amazing what a little radio can do. Because no matter
where you're at, if you have the right stuff and the right power you
can talk to anyone," he says.
Jonathan's dad, Steve Dunn, says the polite chitchat between ham
radio operators is good for teenagers. "If young people have the
opportunity to communicate with a wide range of people, that instills
a certain amount of confidence in their ability to carry on the lost
art of small talk," he says.
Even the most die-hard hams concede that amateur radio will never be
a mainstream hobby. With smart phones and other devices, people are
more plugged in to the Internet than before. But people are still
discovering the joy of communicating with a technology that's existed
for nearly a century.
<http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=125586086>
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