home bbs files messages ]

Just a sample of the Echomail archive

Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.

   HAM      Amateur Radio Interest      13,334 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 12,032 of 13,334   
   Daryl Stout to JIMMY ANDERSON   
   Re: 2m discussion and tra   
   20 Apr 19 02:23:00   
   
   TZUTC: -0500   
   MSGID: 1520.fidonet-ham@1:19/33 21200563   
   REPLY: 1:116/17 30ed4b9f   
   PID: Synchronet 3.17c-Win32  Apr 18 2019 MSC 1800   
   TID: SBBSecho 3.07-Win32 r3.111 Apr 18 2019 MSC 1800   
   Jimmy,   
      
   JA> DS>   Go to www.w2blc.net/cq100nets.htm for a list. I didn't see a Bible   
   JA> DS> Study net, per se...but 2 possible Christian related nets.   
      
   JA>Got it - thx for the link!   
      
     Glad to help. I was chatting on D-Rats last night with KC5FZG (he   
   apparently doesn't have a mic at his computer, so that's how he checks   
   into nets), and I told him about the BBS. He has snagged a lot of files   
   out of my D-Rats Shared Folder...which is fine with me. I even have one   
   in there as an information file on the BBS. Nothing like a shameless   
   plug for your BBS...especially when ham radio and weather are the main   
   themes. :)   
      
   JA> DS>   SDR: Software Defined Radio -- but if your XYL won't let you buy or   
   JA> DS> use it, it's "Spousally Declined Radio" (hi hi).   
      
   JA>LOL - the one I found for Windows appears to actually be the 'real thing'   
   JA>where you can talk HF using the Internet. Is there something like that   
   JA>that's NOT D-Star that you know of? For MAC I mean?   
      
     Not offhand. The only thing I know about an apple is that it's hard to   
   eat with dentures, unless you use an apple coring device, where you can   
   eat it in slivers.    
      
     Here I go...talking about food again...but, as I note on the D-Star   
   Food Net that I run, "H.A.M. stands for H)ave A)nother M)eal"...and "You   
   don't call us 'Late For Dinner'" (hi hi). Besides, with Field Day just   
   over 2 months away, and getting into the heart of hamfest season, you   
   have to keep the visitors and the operators well fed. And, yes, if you   
   eat ham, you are cannibalistic (hi hi).   
      
   JA>Yeah, probably, just like Pokemon Go or something like that that runs   
   JA>all the time.   
      
     I don't have any games on my smartphone. I use it to check email and   
   weather data. I switched my main browser from Google Chrome to Mozilla   
   Firefox. I've been pleasantly surprised with it, and wondered why I   
   waited so long to do it. But, I've done that in the past, including:   
      
   1) Buying a TNC at the Memphis, Tennessee hamfest 20 years ago, when it   
   was at the fairgrounds...to use on packet. But, it sat in my closet for   
   2 years.   
      
   2) Upgrading from Windows 98 to XP -- then finally from Windows 7. With   
   Windows 7 security updates and support ending in January, 2020,   
   Microsoft is trying to get the holdouts to upgrade to Windows 10. Right   
   now, I can't afford to do so...even off of Amazon. $200 per copy, and   
   needing 1 for each computer, makes a rather steep proposition...I could   
   buy a nice rig for that.   
      
   3) Not getting into D-Star and D-Rats when I first had the chance to do   
   so. The latter allows you to chat, exchange messages, and transfer   
   files, in real time. Some nets meet in "chat rooms" (you can also set up   
   a "private chat" with another ham), and the conversation gets busy.   
      
   4) Changing from Google Chrome to Mozilla Firefox. Google has taken   
   forever and a day to load, and Firefox works much faster.   
      
     I used to use Facebook and Messenger on my phone, but don't anymore.   
   I've gotten so where I use an add-on called "Fluff Busting Purity". It   
   filters out all the ads, group suggestions, and other "garbage" that you   
   may not want to see, as you browse Facebook. Right now, I only get on   
   there to:   
      
   A) Upload the "Net Menu" of D-Star, D-Rats, and Echolink Nets (with   
   links to CQ100, D-Star HF, and DMR Nets) to the D-Star Users, D-Star   
   Nets, and DMR Nets groups.   
      
   B) Take checkins for the Arklatex D-Star Net in its respective   
   group...I'll soon do the same with the QCWA group and its D-Star Net,   
   once it moves to the QuadNet array on May 5.   
      
   C) Post the link to the "Rail Passengers Association" News Hotline to   
   the D-Star Trains Net, and the Railfans R Us groups.   
      
     I was spending too much time on there, although I did obtain a bunch   
   of graphical files for areas on the BBS.   
      
   JA> DS>   Do you mean Echolink??   
      
   JA>Yeah, like that I guess...   
      
     Not sure. The only times I get on Echolink are to check into The   
   Millennium Net, the Handi-Hams Midday Net, and the Skywarn Hurricane   
   Prep Net. There was a utility called EchoAnswer, but it doesn't work   
   right under Windows 7...it was a Virtual Answering Machine for Echolink.   
   I also had EchoTime, a shareware product, basically the forerunner of   
   the freeware program EchoProducer. Neither of those are registerable   
   anymore.   
      
     The Millennium Net originally start on both 6 meters and on Echolink.   
   But, after the passing of one of the nets founders 2 years ago, the net   
   went to Echolink only. We still get a nice group of folks chatting in a   
   roundtable format each week (the only time the node for it is up), and   
   they gave me the idea for an Echolink Nets Page 12 years ago. I've   
   expanded that to include D-Star and D-Rats Nets...but also provide links   
   to a "Nets Menu" with this information, plus links to CQ100, D-Star,   
   DMR, and D-Star HF Nets. I've done very little with DMR, and spend most   
   of my time with D-Star and D-Rats.   
      
   JA>Yeah - that link that goes to QSO net - that's the one I found on my own.   
   JA>So it is still not actual HF. Hmm...   
      
     No, but for some new hams, "mic fright" is a very real threat. Also,   
   for those hams who've had to move to an assisted living center,   
   nursing home, or into an HOA, with CC&R's, it still lets one enjoy the   
   ham radio hobby, without all the gear. Unlike regular HF, where you have   
   to have a Technician Class license, to use "a sliver" of 80, 40, 15, and   
   10 meters" for CW only...and another sliver of 10 meters for SSB...but   
   have to be a General or higher to get far more...CQ100 allows Novice   
   Class hams and up to use it. I've even done PSK31 with it.   
      
     There is a yearly fee (currently $39), but paid subscribers can use   
   the service for free on Sunday, and they get an add-on called QSO-TV --   
   sort of like a VoIP version of Amateur Television. While I've seen some   
   "wild pictures" on there, one ham in Canada just constructed band pass   
   filters for 2 meters and 6 meters, and he sent an image of the circuit   
   board, as well as the box it was in. Folks also "checkin to the net" via   
   that addon.   
      
     I do the QCWA (Quarter Century Wireless Association) CQ100 Net on   
   Friday mornings at 10am Central Time, and it's on the same frequency as   
   their 20 meter HF net, which is at 2000 UTC on Sunday. But, lately, HF   
   propagation has been in the toilet, as it were. I also do the QCWA   
   D-Star Net at 4pm Central Time on Sunday, on Reflector 26A...but   
   starting May 5, it'll move to the QuadNet Array (I'll be on X-Reflector   
   757A), where we can also pick up DMR, WIRES, and System Fusion users. Go   
   to www.openquad.net for details.   
      
     As for QCWA itself, if one has been licensed at least 25 years (for   
   2019, it's ANY TIME in 1994 or earlier), and is currently licensed, they   
   can join the organization. Details are at www.qcwa.org -- I'm a member   
   of the national organization, and the Arklatex Chapter.   
      
   Daryl, WX4QZ   
      
   ===   
    þ OLX 1.53 þ Reading while sunbathing makes you well-red.   
   --- SBBSecho 3.07-Win32   
    * Origin: FIDONet: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (1:19/33)   
   SEEN-BY: 1/19 123 15/0 2 16/0 18/200 19/33 36 38 75 34/999 90/1 104/57   
   SEEN-BY: 106/201 116/18 120/302 331 544 123/130 131 140 1970 124/5014   
   SEEN-BY: 124/5016 128/2 130/803 142/926 153/7715 203/0 218/700 221/0   
   SEEN-BY: 221/1 6 360 222/2 226/16 17 229/107 200 312 354 426 728 1014   
   SEEN-BY: 230/150 152 240/1120 5832 249/206 317 400 250/1 261/38 100   
   SEEN-BY: 266/512 267/155 275/100 280/5003 282/1031 1056 291/1 111   
   SEEN-BY: 292/854 8125 301/520 317/3 320/119 219 322/757 335/364 340/400   
   SEEN-BY: 342/13 200 387/21 393/68 396/45 640/1384 712/848 801/161   
   SEEN-BY: 801/189 2320/105 3634/12 5020/1042 31999/99   
   PATH: 19/33 396/45 261/38 320/219 221/1 292/854 229/426   
      

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca