Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-07 Thread G4ILO


Romanchik Dan wrote:
 
 It's all a matter of where you draw the line. This is just more  
 technology, and technology is **supposed** to make things easier.  
 Following your line of reasoning, we'd have to disqualify those using  
 DSP  or beam antennas because it makes DXing harder for those that  
 don't have them.
 
No I don't agree. QRO, beam antennas, better filtering are all part of
radio, and therefore legitimate ways to improve your success at DXing.

The problem with technology like this is that it takes all the skill and
chance out of the hunt. All you have to do is click the mouse and start
sending. It reduces the hobby to a pointless exercise. The DX Cluster was
the start down this rocky road, but it still relies on someone spotting the
DX the hard way, so it doesn't completely ruin the experience.

I think this is a very important issue that affects the value of our hobby.
15 years or so ago people didn't have the internet, and international phone
calls were expensive. The ability to talk with someone half way round the
world was special and magical. These days, it isn't, and people may start to
wonder why we bother using radio when we can use email, Skype or a cheap
phone call.

If people start using computer technology to spot what they need to work
then the actual radio contact becomes little more than a formality. It
devalues the worth of the radio communication considerably. This wouldn't
matter so much if you could just choose not to use this technology, but
people will still be claiming these huge scores having used it, and the rest
will feel either they have to do so too or else give up the game entirely.

A game isn't fun to play if people are cheating.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
Zerobeat Ham Forums: www.zerobeat.net/smf
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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-07 Thread G4ILO


Romanchik Dan wrote:
 
 But just for argument's sake, and because you  
 mentioned skills, how about keyers?? Keyers have taken a lot of the  
 skill out of sending CW, no? Shouldn't we outlaw them?
 
No, that's different. Keyers just automate a repetitive task. They don't
give the user any competitive advantage.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
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RE: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread G4ILO


Steve Ireland wrote:
 
 It is a fascinating program to use and has already been responsible for
 ‘spotting’ a new 160m country for me
 
 
I think this is exactly the kind of thing that people are objecting to.
Taking away the work and the element of chance involved in hunting for the
DX removes a lot of the challenge, even if you do still have to work it. And
if the big guns are instantly alerted to the presence of any DX on the band,
it reduces the window of opportunity for the alert, but un-equipped with
this program, little pistols.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy

Ten out of ten Julian.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD

Julian G4ILO [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I think this is exactly the kind of thing that people are objecting to.
Taking away the work and the element of chance involved in hunting for the
DX removes a lot of the challenge, even if you do still have to work it. And
if the big guns are instantly alerted to the presence of any DX on the band,
it reduces the window of opportunity for the alert, but un-equipped with
this program, little pistols.


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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Romanchik Dan
It's all a matter of where you draw the line. This is just more  
technology, and technology is **supposed** to make things easier.  
Following your line of reasoning, we'd have to disqualify those using  
DSP  or beam antennas because it makes DXing harder for those that  
don't have them.


73!

Dan KB6NU
--
CW Geek and MI Affiliated Club Coordinator
Read my ham radio blog at http://www.kb6nu.com
LET'S GET MORE KIDS INTO HAM RADIO!


On Feb 6, 2008, at Feb 6, 1:30 PM, G4ILO wrote:


Steve Ireland wrote:


It is a fascinating program to use and has already been  
responsible for

‘spotting’ a new 160m country for me


I think this is exactly the kind of thing that people are objecting  
to.
Taking away the work and the element of chance involved in hunting  
for the
DX removes a lot of the challenge, even if you do still have to  
work it. And
if the big guns are instantly alerted to the presence of any DX on  
the band,
it reduces the window of opportunity for the alert, but un-equipped  
with

this program, little pistols.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
Zerobeat Ham Forums: www.zerobeat.net/smf

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RE: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Tom AK2B

After playing with this program for a few days it seems obvious that the
decoding part of the program is trying most of all to extract a call sign.
As a result of this you can see the AI part of the program do what it can to
separate all things after “DE” and construct a legitimate call. You can
almost see it “think” as it makes those decisions. If you’re looking for a
straight CW decoder for ciphering contest calls at mach 3, the K3 will do it
as well as any of them and better than most (including CW Skimmer). I just
admire Alex’s programming efforts. His unusually simple interfaces always
succeed in disguising some very complex programming. The real benefit of
this program will be realized with an I/Q receiver on the IF port.
It seems strange that some hams would find this sort of technology
objectionable. After all, aren’t we all about technology? Why would we hang
around this forum if we weren't looking for a leg up. Just because someone
has found a tool to work a new one doesn’t mean anything except to the ham
that did it. There are times when I take out my homebrew DC receiver and a
homebrew transmitter and pound away. There are times when I like to take my
KX-1 to Central Park. There are times when I have three or four ham programs
running all connected to my K3 during a contest. I do it because I want to
and because its fun. If it wasn’t, I could go play golf (and really make
myself miserable).

Tom, AK2B



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[OT] Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Bill W5WVO

Tom AK2B wrote:


It seems strange that some hams would find this sort of technology
objectionable. After all, aren’t we all about technology? Why would
we hang around this forum if we weren't looking for a leg up?


It's really very simple -- a matter of the normal distribution of the 
variations of human personality.


A substantial proportion of people are naturally conservative. They don't 
react well to things being changed. They will make up a lot of very convincing 
arguments why this or that change is unwise and shouldn't be allowed, but at 
the end of the day, it's just very hard for them emotionally to accept things 
becoming different than what they're used to.


Another substantial proportion of people are naturally progressive. They don't 
react well to things being left alone to mature and take root. They will make 
up a lot of very convincing arguments why this or that isn't good enough and 
has to be changed, but at the end of the day, it's just very hard for them 
emotionally to settle down and leave well enough alone.


These two forces are in a never-ending circular dance of engagement, even 
struggle. This is basically the thesis-antithesis-synthesis process of 
Hegelian dialectic, if you remember your Philosophy 101. If either side, 
thesis or antithesis, becomes all-powerful, the dialectic process is subverted 
and things tend to go wrong eventually.


This is because Nature does have a slight built-in bias in favor of change. 
It's called adaptation. An individual, a species, even life collectively 
either adapts or eventually becomes extinct. Nothing stays the same forever. 
Stasis is not an option in this universe.


This small bit of potentially relevant  philosophy is brought to you as a 
brief respite from the ravages of taking some things in our wonderful hobby 
way too seriously. :-)


Bill W5WVO

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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/6/08 2:59:17 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:


 It seems strange that some hams would find this sort of technology
 objectionable. 

Not to me.


After all, aren’t we all about technology? 

No. While technology is a big part of ham radio, it's not the only thing. If 
it were, we'd have stopped using modes like CW, AM, FM and FSK RTTY long ago. 
We'd have channelized, ALE-type rigs, etc.

Why would we hang
 
 around this forum if we weren't looking for a leg up. Just because someone
 has found a tool to work a new one doesn’t mean anything except to the ham
 that did it.

That's fine in everyday operating. But in a competitive situation like a 
contest it's a different thing entirely, because competition is a mix of 
technology and operator skill.

Some analogies:

What if someone wanted to use a hybrid bicycle in the Tour de France? One 
that would store the energy from a downhill run to be released on an uphill 
climb? For that matter, why aren't mopeds allowed?

I could probably win the Boston Marathon if they let me use roller skates 
(and everyone else didn't).

Corked bats in baseball - super-distance golf balls - turbine-powered Indy 
cars - lots of ways technology can give someone an edge and change the game 
completely.


 There are times when I take out my homebrew DC receiver and a
 
 homebrew transmitter and pound away. There are times when I like to take my
 KX-1 to Central Park. There are times when I have three or four ham programs
 running all connected to my K3 during a contest. I do it because I want to
 and because its fun.

No problem with any of that. The question is, where is the line at which a 
contest station is no longer single-operator unassisted?


 If it wasn’t, I could go play golf (and really make
 
 myself miserable).
 
 They call it golf because all the other four-letter words were already taken.


73 de Jim, N2EY



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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy
With respect Dan I must agree with Julian G4ILO. As I see it, and to use 
your example, DSP and beams are the weapons used during the hunt, but the 
hunter must also know when to hunt, where to hunt and know how to approach 
the prey, skills gained through experience (apology to any DX who might read 
this!). The weapons can be purchased, but once you start to replace the 
skills with some form of 'automatic' system or crutch I believe that much of 
the appeal in working DX is lost. DX Clusters are bad enough IMHO.


73,
Geoff
GM4ESD
(Who has been hunted)


Romanchik Dan  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


It's all a matter of where you draw the line. This is just more
technology, and technology is **supposed** to make things easier.
Following your line of reasoning, we'd have to disqualify those using
DSP  or beam antennas because it makes DXing harder for those that
don't have them.

73!

Dan KB6NU


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RE: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Thom LaCosta

On Wed, 6 Feb 2008, G4ILO wrote:




I think this is exactly the kind of thing that people are objecting to.
Taking away the work and the element of chance involved in hunting for the
DX removes a lot of the challenge, even if you do still have to work it. And
if the big guns are instantly alerted to the presence of any DX on the band,
it reduces the window of opportunity for the alert, but un-equipped with
this program, little pistols.


But, one needs to consider that for some, the game is all about winning, so any 
tool that allows that is far more important than other measures.


I suspect that as long as there are competitions, there will be folks who 
produce and use tools that give them a competetive advantage.


There may even be folks who stopped feeling the need to collect merit badges for 
their sashes after they ceased being teenagers.


73, k3hrn
Thom,EIEIO
Email, Internet, Electronic Information Officer

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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Romanchik Dan
Sorry, but I still don't see this program as any different than any  
other technical gadgetry that hams use to increase their scores  
during a contest. But just for argument's sake, and because you  
mentioned skills, how about keyers?? Keyers have taken a lot of the  
skill out of sending CW, no? Shouldn't we outlaw them?


73!

Dan KB6NU
--
CW Geek and MI Affiliated Club Coordinator
Read my ham radio blog at http://www.kb6nu.com
LET'S GET MORE KIDS INTO HAM RADIO!



On Feb 6, 2008, at Feb 6, 6:53 PM, Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy wrote:

With respect Dan I must agree with Julian G4ILO. As I see it, and  
to use your example, DSP and beams are the weapons used during the  
hunt, but the hunter must also know when to hunt, where to hunt and  
know how to approach the prey, skills gained through experience  
(apology to any DX who might read this!). The weapons can be  
purchased, but once you start to replace the skills with some form  
of 'automatic' system or crutch I believe that much of the appeal  
in working DX is lost. DX Clusters are bad enough IMHO.


73,
Geoff
GM4ESD
(Who has been hunted)


Romanchik Dan  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


It's all a matter of where you draw the line. This is just more
technology, and technology is **supposed** to make things easier.
Following your line of reasoning, we'd have to disqualify those using
DSP  or beam antennas because it makes DXing harder for those that
don't have them.

73!

Dan KB6NU





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Re: [OT] Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread N2EY
In a message dated 2/6/08 4:51:37 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 A substantial proportion of people are naturally conservative. They don't 
 react well to things being changed. 
 
 Another substantial proportion of people are naturally progressive. 

I would say change oriented. 

All progress involves change, but all change does not involve progress.
 
 These two forces are in a never-ending circular dance of engagement, even 
 struggle. This is basically the thesis-antithesis-synthesis process of 
 Hegelian dialectic, if you remember your Philosophy 101. If either side, 
 thesis or antithesis, becomes all-powerful, the dialectic process is 
 subverted 
 and things tend to go wrong eventually.

I think there is a third kind of person: the one who is balanced between the 
two forces.

 This is because Nature does have a slight built-in bias in favor of change. 
 
 It's called adaptation. An individual, a species, even life collectively 
 either adapts or eventually becomes extinct. Nothing stays the same forever. 
 
 Stasis is not an option in this universe.
 

I don't think we know anywhere near enough about the Universe to say that.

Some forms of life here on earth have remained unchanged for tens of millions 
of years, if not longer, because they were and are well-adapted. Others have 
changed radically in much shorter times (domesticated animals, for example) 
because it was adaptive to do so.

The laws of nature don't seem to change over time - we assume that they are 
the same since the Big Bang. 

One law of nature that is too often forgotten is the Law of Unintended 
Consequences. When one has run afoul of that Law, one tends to be a little 
cautious.

 This small bit of potentially relevant  philosophy is brought to you as a 
 brief respite from the ravages of taking some things in our wonderful hobby 
 way too seriously. :-)
 
I am seriously tempted to quote the Philosophy Song from Monty Python, but I 
will leave that for the reader to look up.

Instead I will say this:

Contesting and DXing are essentially competitive games many of us hams play 
because we think they are fun. And like any game, most of the rules are 
arbitrary. And it's not life-or-death if a rule is broken, or stretched.

But that does not mean the rukes should not be taken seriously! Just the 
reverse.

---

Some posts back I made a reference to a QST fiction article from 1953 about a 
ham who built a totally automated SS contest station. It was science-fiction 
back then, but not so fictional today. In fact, it may actually be possible 
today. We already have Pactor robots on the ham bands.(not going there!)

What if someone actually built a completely automatic contest station? One 
that could keep pace with the very best contest ops, would never get tired or 
make a mistake, would listen to every band simultaneously and analyze far more 
data than any human could to maximize score, would access an enormous database 
of info, etc., etc. 

Should such a station be allowed to compete in the same entry class with 
stations that actually need an operator?

IOW, where is the line drawn?

73 de Jim, N2EY




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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-06 Thread Alan Bloom
On Wed, 2008-02-06 at 15:53, Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy wrote:
 ... once you start to replace the 
 skills with some form of 'automatic' system or crutch I believe that much of 
 the appeal in working DX is lost. DX Clusters are bad enough IMHO.
 
 73,
 Geoff
 GM4ESD
 (Who has been hunted)

I must admit that I lost interest in DXing when the DX clusters became
popular.  Seems like they devalue operator skill.

Al N1AL


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RE: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-05 Thread G4ILO


cx7tt wrote:
 
 Gentlemen,
 
 I do not think this program is a bad idea and not withstanding comments 
 from the cw purists, it could actually increase the number and 
 proficiency of cw operators. When I was just starting out and struggling 
 with 22 wpm, contesters running at 35+wpm just blew me away. I recall 
 sitting on their frequencies trying to decipher their SS 
 exchangemaybe listening to 5 or more Qs to figure out what number, 
 what Sec, what CK, etc? If a beginner can decipher via software, while 
 listening, isnt' that a learning experience? 
 I am an avid cw op, participate in many contests and have been a guest 
 operator (40m) during CQWWCW at K3LR's super station. Who among us would 
 not love for more beginners to show up during those sloww 
 periods on Sunday afternoon? How many times have you hit F1, just 
 waiting for new blood.  If a guy, using the program can work me quickly 
 using this program, move on to the next, etc, then his/her enjoyment 
 will also increase and maybe, just maybe, be the impetus to learn, 
 practice and participate in future cw events.
 
I think you (and others) are missing the point of this, as I did when I
first read Doug's post. This is not a tool to help those who can't be
bothered to learn CW operate in contests. Such tools have already been
available for a long time - CWGet, MixW, gMFSK, fldigi, HRD. And even our
very own K3 now has a built in CW decoder. No-one other than the purists
complain about this, and I believe that many contest ops use such software
to help read the very fast code many people use, even if most of them prefer
to keep quiet about it. :)

What this software does appear to do is to show the *calls* of every station
operating within the passband. This means that an operator using the
software will be able to spot someone they haven't already worked, a new
multiplier or whatever, much quicker than they would if they had to tune
around and listen. All that's needed - if it hasn't been thought of already
- is an interface between this program and popular logging software to
highlight the calls you most need to work.

The average casual contest participant is not going to pay $75 for this
thing. But the really keen, ultra-competitive ops would, because it gives
them a competitive advantage over those who don't use it. Except of course
that if everyone uses it, it just sets a level playing field at a higher
point, and removes some of the skill and fun at the same time.

I'm sure this software was an interesting challenge to write, but it would
have been better if the author had kept it to himself.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
Zerobeat Ham Forums: www.zerobeat.net/smf
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Re: [Elecraft] New concept/tool for CW dxing

2008-02-05 Thread Vic K2VCO

G4ILO wrote:


What this software does appear to do is to show the *calls* of every station
operating within the passband. This means that an operator using the
software will be able to spot someone they haven't already worked, a new
multiplier or whatever, much quicker than they would if they had to tune
around and listen. All that's needed - if it hasn't been thought of already
- is an interface between this program and popular logging software to
highlight the calls you most need to work.


There is already a similar function in most contest logging software, 
called the bandmap. The display looks the same, a bunch of calls vs. 
frequency. The software generally allows you to click on the call, which 
takes your rig to the appropriate frequency.


The difference is where the information comes from. The bandmap in 
current software is populated by dx cluster spots, received over a 
telnet connection or by a packet network. So before they appear, 
somebody has to spot them. And -- significantly -- many contests' rules 
state that use of a cluster puts the operator in an 'assisted' class.


This is a big deal. Would the rules need to call this 'assisted' as 
well? And if so, how could such a rule be enforced (there are ways to 
catch cheaters using clusters)? And how could a rule be written that 
would distinguish between software aids that do not constitute 
assistance and those that do? I doubt that it's possible.


If this really works -- and if it doesn't today, some day it will -- it 
will present a real challenge to contest sponsors. If the distinction 
between 'assisted' and 'unassisted' can't be maintained, then someone 
who does *not* use the software will be at a distinct disadvantage.


Personally, I always enter contests 'unassisted' because I like finding 
my own mults. I hope this doesn't become accepted practice.

--
73,
Vic, K2VCO
Fresno CA
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco
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