[TWIAR] TWIAR Edition 766 General Release
w2xbs
w2xbs at verizon.net
Sat Dec 15 16:46:16 EST 2007
This Week in Amateur Radio - Edition # 766
Air dates: 12.15.07 > 12.22.07
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-- North America's Premier On-The-Air Amateur Magazine Service --
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* * * CELEBRATING 14.73 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE HAM RADIO COMMUNITY * * *
Here is a summary of the news items and special features covered in
Edition #766 of "This Week in Amateur Radio", and "This Week in Amateur Radio
Headline News". North Americas premier on-the-air audio news magazines, for
the week begining December 15, 2007.
This week's edition of This Week in Amateur Radio comes to you anchored by
Jay Silvio, N9WMU, reporting from our southern news bureau in Richmond,
Virginia, by Andrew Slaugh, KB2LUV, reporting from our northeast news bureau
in Syracuse, New York, and by Will Rogers, W4WLR, reporting from our southern
news bureau in West Palm Beach, Florida, by Dave Lufkin, KB3JRJ, reporting
from our mid-atlantic news bureau in Washington D.C., and by Jim Wishner,
N0EXX, reporting from our mid-west news bureau in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
Mixing, editing, and additional anchoring by George Bowen, W2XBS at our
headquarters facility in Albany, New York.
THIS WEEKS PROGRAM RUNNING TIMES:
--------------------------------
* FULL VERSION of This Week in Amateur Radio runs 89 minutes.
-------------------------------------------
* HEADLINE NEWS VERSION of This Week in Amateur Radio runs 60 minutes.
SPECIAL PROGRAM NOTES:
* Closed circuit advisory and weekly program promos are available as
a separate audio file download.
CONTENT:
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Stories covered and special features in This Weeks edition:
01. Hams assist as ice storms move across the mid-western United States.
02. Severe winter weather hits Hawaii as hams provide emergency communications
03. Washington state amateurs provide communications during high winds and
mass flooding.
04. Consolidated Edision pulls the plug on DC power in New York City.
05. The Radio Club of America honors Walter Cronkite, KB2GSD.
06. German television broadcaster shut down the last 50 megahertz transmitters.
07. NASA delays the launch of the Space Shuttle Atlantis until January.
08. The FCC writes to an amateur regarding his vanity call sign.
09. California adopts a rather strange policy for its new vanity license plate
10. The FCC releases the 2008 edition of its EAS Handbook.
11. World record pedestrian communication attempt fails to take the record.
12. Amateurs successfully bounce signals off the International Space Station.
13. Technology News with Leo Laporte: Congress may end free WiFi.
14. WinLink system proves to be a reliable mode in emergency situations.
15. Tower Climbing and Antenna Safety with Greg Stoddard, KF9MP.
16. Working Amateur Radio Satellites with Bruce Paige, KK5DO.
17. KZEY-AM is fined by the FCC for operating omni-directionally.
18. More Musings with Will Rogers, W4WLR. "Boat Anchors"
19. WYSL-AM files its second complaint with the FCC regarding IBOC
interference.
20. The FCC adopts new regulations for Low Power FM Stations, and finds that
HD radio is not too popular with non-commercial stations.
21. TWIAR QSL Cards are now available. Write in for yours today!
22. Special event station listings.
23. The Gateway 160 Meter Net Report with Vern Jackson, WA0RCR.
24. Weekly propagation forecast.
25. Spain jumps on the D-STAR bandwagon as EA3RCC comes on the air.
26. INDEXA announces it has launched its new web site.
27. TWIAR International is on WBCQ 7.415mHz each Saturday afternoon at 16:00
eastern time.
28. The Random Access File with Bill Baran, N2FNH. "Kids and amateur radio"
29. ABC radio is set to broadcast anywhere anytime in disaster situations.
30. The Radio Club of America elects its new Board of Directors.
31. Foundation for Amateur Radio scholarships are now available.
32. Inventor James West is asked to find a new way to communicate text to the
blind community.
33. U.K. regulator OfCom sets its 2012 Olympic RF allocations.
34. National Institute of Standards releases research on promoting WWV.
Transmission and production expenses for this edition of This Week in
Amateur Radio, was made possible by our staff and crew at our headquarters
in Albany, New York. Remember that out of pocket expenses to cover production
of this weekly bulletin service by our staff is a limited resource. If you
value our service, to keep you up-to-date on all the latest amateur radio
news, please help support us. Although we can't tell you how to support us
on the air, you will find all the information you need on our web site at
W-W-W dot T-W-I-A-R dot O-R-G.
Amateurs from coast to coast and around the world are demonstrating the
unique public service and emergency communications aspects of amateur radio
to local government officials and the general public. It is important for
amateurs to stay up to date with latest news and events taking place in the
amateur service.
This Week in Amateur Radio is here to fill that need, with all the latest
amateur radio news and special features, from a single, reliable, news source.
This Week in Amateur Radio remains on the cutting edge of technology with our
own dedicated server on the internet. We use the latest MP3, MP4 (aac), and
WMA audio encoding codecs, along with legacy support for low bit rate Real
Audio.
This Week in Amateur Radio was the first amateur radio news service to support
podcasting. You can subscribe to our RSS/XML podcast feeds, download directly
from our web site, or find our programs around the web on sites like
Apple I-Tunes, Podcast Pickle, and a lot more.
This Week in Amateur Radio is also proud to be archived on The Internet
Archive" site.
Also, remember that This Week in Amateur Radio is listener and club supported.
When you help "This Week in Amateur Radio" through our support fund, by
tradition, we mention during the course of the bulletin service each week,
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Mention is also made on the air, on a rotating basis, each of our affiliates
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"This Week in Amateur Radio" is proud to be your reliable source for all the
late-breaking, up-to-the-minute amateur news each week, as we have been for
the past twelve years. Our special segments each week, adds to the value of
the service to the amateur community, and are exclusively available on "This
Week in Amateur Radio"
"This Week in Amateur Radio" is a weekly amateur radio audio, on the air, news
magazine/bulletin service, produced by a lot of dedicated volunteers, by
Community Video Associates, Inc., a New York State not-for-profit corporation.
The mailing address for our support fund is:
This Week in Amateur Radio Support Fund
P.O. Box 30
Sand Lake, New York 12153
This Week in Amateur Radio is distributed each Saturday evening
on the internet (www.twiar.org) and also on commercial satellite via
the "W0KIE Satellite Network". Visit www.w0kie.com for details.
Please note that the W0KIE Satellite Network is currently in a state
of transition between satellites. As soon as the network announces its
new satellite locations, we will publish them here.
On the World Wide Web, program audio can now be found in two different
program lengths. Our full version which runs around 100 minutes. A new
telescoped one hour version, This Week in Amateur Radio Headline News is also
available.
This Week in Amateur Radio is licensed under the Creative Commons
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a copy of this license.
Contact your local amateur radio club or repeater operator if "This Week in
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Further information is available by calling W2XBS at 518.283.3665, or e-mail
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We look forward to hearing from you or your organization soon!
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