<<Why to I want to try to send email via a slow speed serial stream when I
have 100 meg Internet on the computer next to the rig?

 

Ask a marine mobile station who may be far out at sea and when the band
conditions stink, this is the kind of emergency where PACTOR 3 may be on the
short-list of available modes of communication.  This is not a theoretical
scenario either.  Happens all the time.  A daily PMBO contact sends GPS info
and allows others to track their whereabouts.  

 

Michael

 

  _____  

From: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of W2XJ
Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2007 10:53 AM
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Bulk] Re: [digitalradio] Questions on digital opposition

 

I think the whole thing is pointless. Why to I want to try to send email 
via a slow speed serial stream when I have 100 meg Internet on the 
computer next to the rig? I firmly believe that these systems are too 
organized to be dependable in an emergency. That is when you loose a lot 
of infrastructure. Simple systems, temporary installations all with some 
form of emergency power is what is required in an emergency. Modes 
should be those that can be supported station to station. Basically if 
it is not part of the rig, it is too complicated for an emergency. Now 
that CW is not an FCC requirement that is no reason to abandon it as a 
primary emergency mode. It is still the mode that permits one to 
accomplish the most with the least.

Rud Merriam wrote:
> This is meant as a couple of constructive, clarifying, questions for those
> who express strong displeasure with Pactor.
> 
> Would you decrease your opposition if Pactor III did not expand its
> bandwidth? 
> 
> Could you accept wide band digital modes if they all operated in a fixed
> bandwidth, i.e. not expanding or contracting due to band conditions?
> 
> 
> Rud Merriam K5RUD 
> ARES AEC Montgomery County, TX
> http://TheHamNetwor <http://TheHamNetwork.net> k.net
> 
> 

 

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