For those who are not subscribed to APRSSIG, some sad news.

----- Forwarded message from Steve Dimse <st...@dimse.com> -----

Date: Wed, 9 Feb 2022 10:29:54 -0500
From: 
To: 
Subject: [aprssig] WB4APR SK

Yes, it is true. Amateur radio has lost a true pioneer in its transition to the 
digital age. I will certainly miss him. We often argued, but I deeply respected 
him. I'm glad I had the chance to express that to him unequivocally before his 
death. When he was diagnosed he was not expected to last 6 months but he made 
it two years, and it took covid to finish the job. He was tough as well as 
brilliant.

Bob did not want to make a big deal of his cancer and did not want sympathy, so 
he only told a few people. He did drop a few hints over the last two years 
though. Bob tried to get a group of active programmers in APRS to come 
together, but no one stepped forward. We talked about it, and I told him I 
thought it would not happen until he made his diagnosis public and involved the 
larger community. He did not want to do that, so I agreed to help as I could. I 
have control of aprs.org, and TAPR has the paperwork to transfer the APRS 
trademark.

The APRS community has some choices to make. I am no spring chicken myself, and 
I have no desire to assume Bob's throne on top of APRS. However I am not going 
to just hand responsibility to a single person. This needs to be a community 
effort and not become dependent on a single person. We need to use this sad 
opportunity to strengthen APRS. I hope people will step forward to form a group 
to assume the leadership role. I would like to see a non-profit formed with a 
real board of directors, bylaws, and open membership. But I'm not going to do 
it - collaboration is not one of my strengths either!

I am sure TAPR will be willing to help in any way it can, and a real APRS group 
should be able to secure a grant from ARDC (ampr.org) for funding itself. If 
you weren't aware ARDC, which has held the 44.0.0.0/8 IP allocation since the 
beginning, sold an unused quarter of the allocation to Amazon for $108 million 
a couple years back, and has been giving out grants for worthy ham radio 
projects. 

This can be a beginning of a new era for APRS if a few people are willing to 
take on a lot of unpaid, under-appreciated effort. If that doesn't happen, I 
will update the aprs.org pages with new user-defined packet definitions and 
to-calls. I will not be drawn into discussion about protocol changes, new 
icons, or other such minutia. Other than housekeeping details, the protocol is 
not officially changing until an open membership group steps up and takes over. 
Without the ability to change, people may decide to implement changes 
unilaterally, which will not be good for the community.

Bob loved APRS, and he wanted it to thrive after his death. But for all his 
flashes of brilliance he was never good at creating a collaborative group. We 
tried to help him by creating the APRS Working Group in the early 2000s but he 
never did anything with it once we created the protocol and stepped aside. It 
is time for someone to step into his shoes and lead, or APRS will decline.

It is in your hands.

Steve K4HG



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----- End forwarded message -----

-- 
Tom Russo    KM5VY
Tijeras, NM  

 echo "prpv_a'rfg_cnf_har_cvcr" | sed -e 's/_/ /g' | tr [a-m][n-z] [n-z][a-m]

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