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- Date: Tue, 21 Dec 93 02:33:44 PST
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V93 #1488
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Tue, 21 Dec 93 Volume 93 : Issue 1488
-
- Today's Topics:
- Bravo, Bravo +, etc. pager options and programming ?
- Coax recommendations? (2 msgs)
- Daily Summary of Solar Geophysical Activity for 18 December
- FCC Frequency Allocation data base
- Free access to the 3 Second Terrain Data Base is BACK!
- HDN Releases (2 msgs)
- Log-EQF (again)
- Still waiting for license, much lo
- subscribe
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 19 Dec 1993 02:13:05 GMT
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!math.ohio-state.edu!news2.uunet.ca!uusynap.synapse.org!uuisis!ve3ppe!znha@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Bravo, Bravo +, etc. pager options and programming ?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <1993Dec14.151407.3179@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>, gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman) wrote:
- >In article <1993Dec14.012520.27012@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> mwgordon@nyx10.cs.du.edu (Mike Gordon) writes:
- >> Due to a career change, I will be back to using a pager soon. About
- ...my condolences. Wore one for years, then a cellphone. Prefered the cellphone.
- >
- >I don't know if there's a proper group for discussing pagers, but there
- >certainly should be some expertise here. I'm about to be put on the "leash"
- >too, and would appreciate some discussion of the different pagers and
- >types of service available out there.
-
- Hi Gary!
-
- My 5 cents on pagers as I understand them:
-
- 1. Message format:
- a. Tone only. Pager beeps when activated. Cheapest option.
- b. Voice. Pager unsquelches when activated, allowing one to hear
- garbled audio of original sender.
- c. Numeric. Sender's DTMF digits scroll across a small LCD
- display, and optionally kept in memory for later recall. Can
- usually beep, often vibrate or poke, some times flash--all of
- this to get your attention.
- d. Alphanumeric. Sender's text scroll across a larger LCD
- display, and again, optionally stored. Most expensive option.
-
- 2. Addressing format:
- a. Two-tone: Originally two low frequency (>300 Hz) reeds resonated
- to detect a page. Original "Code Access Plug", or CAP. Restricted
- unique pagers available to paging company to sell to thousands.
- b. Five/six tone: As above, however increased unique range available.
- c. Digital:
- i. POCSAG: format arrived at by British Post Office for
- Standard Radio Paging Code. Essentially 32-bit FSK
- codewords with 2^18 unique addresses and 2^2 function
- codes. Supports all messages formats. Known in Canada
- as "RPC-1." For the most part, the address, or CAP code
- is re-programmable by the air-time vendor.
- ii. GOLAY: another digital format, I don't know much about.
- d. Speeds:
- 512 (mature) 1,200 (most) 2,400 (alpha-oriented) 4,800 (newest)
- signal changes per second (bauds). Most are NBFM, 4.5 KHz deviation.
-
- 3. Distribution Techniques:
- a. Point source: for limited coverage (in-house) systems. Cheapest.
- b. Simul-cast: Several slaved remote transmitters, through the
- careful control of delay, all transmit the same information at
- the same time. Much wider coverage.
- c. Networked: Multiple cities connected through leased lines exchange
- information for delivery via a or b above. Up to continent coverage.
- d. Satellite assisted: Master information is uplinked to a "bird"
- for delivery by a or b above on one or more continents.
-
- 4. Bands:
- a. Vhf mid (say 140 MHz) and high (say 170 MHz) +- 15 MHz or so.
- Most popular band, heavily used. All expansion is in PRC or
- similar area, as urban North America is already crowded. Vhf
- low (say 40 MHz +- 10 MHz) appears "mature."
- b. Uhf mid (say 460 MHz) and high 940 MHz +- 10 MHz or so
- Area of most growth now.
-
- 5. Physical:
- a. Really old units are 6" high by 3" wide by 1" deep and take huge
- batteries--1" diameter by 2.5" long. I picked up a Motorola "Page
- Boy" for free at Dayton hamvention when I bought an accompaning
- Uhf power amp.
- b. Modern numeric are roughly 2" square, 0.5" deep, and usually take
- 'N' or AAA cells. Cells should last about a month. Thin units are
- credit-card sized, roughly 0.25" thick, and take Silver Oxide or
- Zinc-Air cells. Minature units are formed like a big watch, or a
- big fountain pen, that sort-of form factor. These can be had at
- Dayton for about $1.
- c. Modern alphanumeric are roughly 3" long by 2" high by 0.75" deep.
- Most of the face is the LCD display and the rest control keys. No,
- I didn't see any for sale cheap at Dayton--yet!
-
- 6. Trade Journal/Association: Telelocator (My boss swears by it as The Fount
- of Information, and won't pass them around the office.)
-
- Personal-opinion mode=ON;
- Most popular pagers are digital ones. Cost $200 purchase plus
- about $10-15 per month (canadian). They use uhf band, 1,200 baud,
- pocsag, and a AAA cell. Your other choices are 1. nothing, 2.
- mobile text (RAM or ARDIS), 3. commercial 2-way, or 4. cellphone.
-
- Advantages:
- 1. You know the number you to dial by looking at it. Most have
- at least 20 digit by 4 memory. Numbers can be reviewed, locked and
- deleted.
- 2. Communication is one-way. You know who likely paged you by the
- number, and whether you can safely defer responding. Easy
- to have a computer page you with "ATDT" strings.
- 3. You can know that somebody can "put the touch" on you almost
- anywhere, except deep in the bowels of a computer-oriented company.
- This includes the freeway, store, church, or when you need to get
- out of a particularly nasty meeting. (Heh heh heh!)
- 4. They are generally rugged compared to a cellphone. One colleague
- went swimming with one, to his horror. Took it home, opened it up,
- dryed the thing out with a hairdryer "real well." Keeps working.
- I'd like to see a cellphone do that!
-
- Disadvantages:
- 1. Sending a page eludes some people. ("Touch tones? I talked, and
- the nice lady said 'thank-you'. Why didn't you return my call?")
- 2. Communication is one-way. You have no way of knowing if the pagee
- got it, and when. As the paged, when you call back, they're never at
- the dam number they sent. ("You took to long." "It was a pay
- phone." "I fixed it myself." "How did I know the phone was forwarded
- to Fred?" "Coverage out in the boonies, where you live, is spotty.")
- 3. The touch can be put on you almost anywhere. I think of Cliff
- Stoll's book... Sometimes, you want/need to shake the lease.
-
- Gee Wiz:
- 1. The antennas in the beasts are a real compromise. On body, off
- body, severe fades, and maybe 4" of loop. Try and achieve -120 dBm
- sensitivity for 12 dB SINAD, 80%+ page rate. Ever wonder why the
- front and back of the little jobber radio shack sells is metal? It
- IS the antenna!
- 2. Power management is a big deal too. How many weeks straight can
- you run your radio and computer on 1 AAA cell? The trick is to
- get the AVERAGE current down to micro amps, duty cycles to no more
- than a couple of percent, peak currents to milli amps, and run the
- thing as slow as possible (2 MHz cpu, direct conversion vhf radios,
- strobed displays, auto-power down, etcetera).
-
- Personal-opinion mode=OFF;
-
- Hope that helps you folks getting pagers. My limited experience comes from
- trying to write the kernel for one--so I'm biased--but I think I've layed a
- reasonable groundwork for others to fine tune. (Probably at a Grade 8 level,
- though. Sorry, Gary! :-)
-
- 73, Gord.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 20 Dec 1993 15:56:38 GMT
- From: koriel!newscast.West.Sun.COM!cronkite.Central.Sun.COM!webrider!doc@ames.arpa
- Subject: Coax recommendations?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Greetings -
-
- I'm a new Ham who is drilling his first holes into the attic and
- basement for antenna use (Townhome so can't put it out in the open
- on the roof). My question is this - Given an run of about 50 ft.
- for the cable, what would the consensus be regarding the minimum
- size/grade of coax? I'm looking to find that point of diminishing
- returns on the type of cable I use.
-
- The present antenna to be installed will be a 2-meter 4 element
- Yagi (because I got a good deal on it). I'm also considering how
- best to handle the possibility of running multiple cables for up
- to 3 antennas. Would multiple cables with a switch box on the
- control end be best, or is there another method that wouldn't
- require total duplication of cables (remote switching?)?
-
- Many thanks for any information,
-
- ---
- --
- -- Steve Bunis, Sun Microsystems ***DoD #0795*** 93-ST1100
- -- Itasca, IL ***AMA #682049***
- -- ***HRCA #HM125617**
- -- *** N9VLP ***
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 21 Dec 93 02:32:43 GMT
- From: rtech!ingres!kerry@decwrl.dec.com
- Subject: Coax recommendations?
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <2f4hvmINNa6r@cronkite.Central.Sun.COM> doc@webrider.central.sun.com writes:
- >Greetings -
- >
- >I'm a new Ham who is drilling his first holes into the attic and
- >basement for antenna use (Townhome so can't put it out in the open
- >on the roof). My question is this - Given an run of about 50 ft.
- >for the cable, what would the consensus be regarding the minimum
- >size/grade of coax? I'm looking to find that point of diminishing
- >returns on the type of cable I use.
- >
- >The present antenna to be installed will be a 2-meter 4 element
- >Yagi (because I got a good deal on it). I'm also considering how
- >best to handle the possibility of running multiple cables for up
- >to 3 antennas. Would multiple cables with a switch box on the
- >control end be best, or is there another method that wouldn't
- >require total duplication of cables (remote switching?)?
-
- I think you'll find after the effort and time of climbing up and down,
- back and forth, etc. that whether you spend $20 or $50 on cable really
- doesn't make that much difference in cost but can certainly make a big
- difference in performance.
-
- I'd say for a 50w rig at 2m (VHF) RG8U is probably the minimum you
- want to use. For 440 (UHF) you probably want to go with 9913. If
- you want to run VHF & UHF, consider purchasing duplexers. If the runs
- are short enough and accessible, then I might just run multiple lines.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 18 Dec 1993 22:14:24 MST
- From: mvb.saic.com!unogate!news.service.uci.edu!usc!math.ohio-state.edu!cyber2.cyberstore.ca!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!unixg.ubc.ca!kakwa.ucs.ualberta.ca!alberta!nebulus!ve6mgs!usenet@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Daily Summary of Solar Geophysical Activity for 18 December
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
-
- DAILY SUMMARY OF SOLAR GEOPHYSICAL ACTIVITY
-
- 18 DECEMBER, 1993
-
- /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
-
- (Based In-Part On SESC Observational Data)
-
-
- SOLAR AND GEOPHYSICAL ACTIVITY INDICES FOR 18 DECEMBER, 1993
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- !!BEGIN!! (1.0) S.T.D. Solar Geophysical Data Broadcast for DAY 352, 12/18/93
- 10.7 FLUX=085.1 90-AVG=098 SSN=051 BKI=2233 2343 BAI=013
- BGND-XRAY=A5.7 FLU1=7.1E+06 FLU10=1.2E+04 PKI=2233 2343 PAI=013
- BOU-DEV=015,018,035,039,018,029,050,021 DEV-AVG=028 NT SWF=00:000
- XRAY-MAX= B3.6 @ 1528UT XRAY-MIN= A5.3 @ 1118UT XRAY-AVG= B1.0
- NEUTN-MAX= +001% @ 1100UT NEUTN-MIN= -003% @ 0530UT NEUTN-AVG= -0.4%
- PCA-MAX= +0.1DB @ 1020UT PCA-MIN= -0.3DB @ 1045UT PCA-AVG= -0.0DB
- BOUTF-MAX=55359NT @ 0046UT BOUTF-MIN=55321NT @ 1823UT BOUTF-AVG=55348NT
- GOES7-MAX=P:+000NT@ 0000UT GOES7-MIN=N:+000NT@ 0000UT G7-AVG=+067,+000,+000
- GOES6-MAX=P:+119NT@ 1640UT GOES6-MIN=N:-063NT@ 0914UT G6-AVG=+089,+023,-032
- FLUXFCST=STD:085,086,087;SESC:085,086,087 BAI/PAI-FCST=020,018,012/022,018,012
- KFCST=2233 4544 4443 3322 27DAY-AP=005,005 27DAY-KP=2212 2221 1211 1222
- WARNINGS=
- ALERTS=
- !!END-DATA!!
-
- NOTE: The Effective Sunspot Number for 17 DEC 93 was 36.0.
- The Full Kp Indices for 17 DEC 93 are: 3o 3+ 3- 3+ 4- 3o 3+ 3-
-
-
- SYNOPSIS OF ACTIVITY
- --------------------
-
- Solar activity was very low. Region 7635 (N02E25)
- produced a moderate duration B3/SN at 18/1533Z. A small B-class
- group emerged at N12W53 and was numbered as Region 7638. Yohkoh
- x-ray images are showing a moderate enhancement at the northeast
- limb where old Region 7624 is due to return in two days.
-
- Solar activity forecast: solar activity should continue
- at a very low level. There is a remote possibility Region
- 7635 could produce another long duration C-class flare as it
- did on 17 Dec.
-
- The geomagnetic field was mostly quiet to unsettled.
- Isolated active conditions were experienced at mid and high
- latitude sites at various times.
-
- Geophysical activity forecast: the geomagnetic field
- should become active on 19 Dec in response to a disappearing
- filament observed on 14-15 Dec from the southwest quadrant.
- Unsettled to active levels are expected on 20 Dec with
- primarily unsettled conditions forecast for 21 Dec.
-
- Event probabilities 19 dec-21 dec
-
- Class M 01/01/01
- Class X 01/01/01
- Proton 01/01/01
- PCAF Green
-
- Geomagnetic activity probabilities 19 dec-21 dec
-
- A. Middle Latitudes
- Active 30/30/25
- Minor Storm 20/15/10
- Major-Severe Storm 05/05/01
-
- B. High Latitudes
- Active 35/30/25
- Minor Storm 20/15/10
- Major-Severe Storm 10/05/01
-
- HF propagation conditions were below-normal over the high
- and polar latitude paths. Middle and low latitude paths saw
- generally near-normal conditions with periods of minor signal
- degradation during the local night and sunrise sectors. No
- significant changes are expected over the next 48 hours,
- although some weak improvements may begin to be observed on
- about 21 December. The weak state of the ionosphere coupled
- with the minor solar disturbances which have arrived over the
- last several days will maintain periods of night-sector signal
- degradation and lower than normal MUFs over all regions.
-
-
- COPIES OF JOINT USAF/NOAA SESC SOLAR GEOPHYSICAL REPORTS
- ========================================================
-
- REGIONS WITH SUNSPOTS. LOCATIONS VALID AT 18/2400Z DECEMBER
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- NMBR LOCATION LO AREA Z LL NN MAG TYPE
- 7635 N02E24 274 0050 HSX 02 002 ALPHA
- 7637 N07W34 332 0010 AXX 01 002 ALPHA
- 7638 N12W54 352 0010 BXO 03 004 BETA
- 7639 N08W15 313 0010 BXO 02 003 BETA
- 7632 N05W46 344 PLAGE
- 7636 N14W37 335 PLAGE
- REGIONS DUE TO RETURN 19 DECEMBER TO 21 DECEMBER
- NMBR LAT LO
- 7624 N04 192
- 7625 S15 185
-
-
- LISTING OF SOLAR ENERGETIC EVENTS FOR 18 DECEMBER, 1993
- -------------------------------------------------------
- BEGIN MAX END RGN LOC XRAY OP 245MHZ 10CM SWEEP
- NONE
-
-
- POSSIBLE CORONAL MASS EJECTION EVENTS FOR 18 DECEMBER, 1993
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- BEGIN MAX END LOCATION TYPE SIZE DUR II IV
- NO EVENTS OBSERVED
-
-
- INFERRED CORONAL HOLES. LOCATIONS VALID AT 18/2400Z
- ---------------------------------------------------
- ISOLATED HOLES AND POLAR EXTENSIONS
- EAST SOUTH WEST NORTH CAR TYPE POL AREA OBSN
- 53 S47W52 S50W62 S21W82 S21W82 010 ISO NEG 013 10830A
-
-
- SUMMARY OF FLARE EVENTS FOR THE PREVIOUS UTC DAY
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- Date Begin Max End Xray Op Region Locn 2695 MHz 8800 MHz 15.4 GHz
- ------ ---- ---- ---- ---- -- ------ ------ --------- --------- ---------
- 17 Dec: 1948 2039 2150 C2.0 SF 7635 N07E43
-
-
- REGION FLARE STATISTICS FOR THE PREVIOUS UTC DAY
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- C M X S 1 2 3 4 Total (%)
- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --- ------
- Region 7635: 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 001 (100.0)
- Uncorrellated: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 ( 0.0)
-
- Total Events: 001 optical and x-ray.
-
-
- EVENTS WITH SWEEPS AND/OR OPTICAL PHENOMENA FOR THE LAST UTC DAY
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date Begin Max End Xray Op Region Locn Sweeps/Optical Observations
- ------ ---- ---- ---- ---- -- ------ ------ ---------------------------
- 17 Dec: 1948 2039 2150 C2.0 SF 7635 N07E43 IV
-
- NOTES:
- All times are in Universal Time (UT). Characters preceding begin, max,
- and end times are defined as: B = Before, U = Uncertain, A = After.
- All times associated with x-ray flares (ex. flares which produce
- associated x-ray bursts) refer to the begin, max, and end times of the
- x-rays. Flares which are not associated with x-ray signatures use the
- optical observations to determine the begin, max, and end times.
-
- Acronyms used to identify sweeps and optical phenomena include:
-
- II = Type II Sweep Frequency Event
- III = Type III Sweep
- IV = Type IV Sweep
- V = Type V Sweep
- Continuum = Continuum Radio Event
- Loop = Loop Prominence System,
- Spray = Limb Spray,
- Surge = Bright Limb Surge,
- EPL = Eruptive Prominence on the Limb.
-
-
- ** End of Daily Report **
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 20 Dec 1993 01:08:08 GMT
- From: sdd.hp.com!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!gatech!usenet.ufl.edu!mailer.acns.fsu.edu!freenet2.scri.fsu.edu!twright@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: FCC Frequency Allocation data base
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Is the FCC Frequency Allocation Data Base available?
- I know that the people who run paging and comercial radio sales have
- this and its updated every 3 months by the FCC.
- What it does is like this:
-
- Freq: 158.790 lists everyone assigned on that frequency
- . its like the frequency books you get at Rad.Shack but this is
- either on Disc or CD ROM.
-
- Tim Wright KD4OVM
-
- --
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 19 Dec 1993 19:33:36 -0500
- From: digex.net!not-for-mail@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Free access to the 3 Second Terrain Data Base is BACK!
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Well, it's back! A long time ago, I offered free HAM access to
- perform point-to-point terrain profile. A lot of people
- used it, it became a pain-in-the-butt of Communications Data Services,
- and we killed the offer. But due to demand, and a few more modem
- lines, we can once again make the offer.
-
- Here is the deal:
-
- Email me (rich@comm-data.com) a short (2 line will do it) note about
- what kind of project you are working on -- just so I know it is
- related to amateur radio -- and I'll mail you back instruction on
- using the system. You get 5 accesses for the asking, and more with
- a good argument. Right not you need to call our computer in Virginia.
- If someone can help me figure out telnet "ports", I'll have it up for
- telnet too!
-
- FREE ACCESS TO THE US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY's / DOD 3 ARC SECOND
- DIGITAL TERRAIN DATA BASE
-
- You get a tabular list of distance and height (sorry - metric ONLY!).
- Getting Fresnel Zone and 4/3 Earth is your problem -- at least for now.
-
- Right now, I am only willing/able to let single terrain radials out.
- If there are some interesting repeater coordination issues, or
- some high-tech left-winged wild ideas about propagation and antennas
- you want to talk about, please drop me a note. I have all kinds of other
- toys, but they are a little more commercial -- I can run them for you
- and send you the results or something like that.
-
- Cheers.
- Rich
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 18 Dec 1993 23:10:05
- From: sdd.hp.com!nigel.msen.com!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!eff!news.kei.com!news.oc.com!utacfd.uta.edu!rwsys!ocitor!FredGate@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: HDN Releases
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- The following files were processed Saturday 12-18-93:
-
-
- HAMLOG [ HAM: Amateur radio logging programs ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- PCSW22.ZIP ( 160118 bytes) PC Shortwave Monitor V2.2 freq
- management by Scott Gitlin
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 160118 bytes in 1 file(s)
-
-
- HAMNEWS [ HAM: Bulletins and Newsletters ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- ARLD060.LZH ( 1261 bytes) ARRL DX Bulletin 12/16/93
- ARLP050.LZH ( 805 bytes) ARRL Propagation Bulletin 12/17/93
- RACES304.LZH ( 1243 bytes) RACES Bulletin # 304 12/13/93
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 3309 bytes in 3 file(s)
-
-
- HAMPACK [ HAM: Packet Communications programs ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- ARESPK30.ZIP ( 143703 bytes) Multi-window term prg for emerg
- comm via packet
- THUNDER.ZIP ( 134125 bytes) V10.7 Terminal Packet Program by
- LU4AEY
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 277828 bytes in 2 file(s)
-
-
- TVRO [ TVRO: TVRO satellite feeds, FAQ, TVRO BBS listings ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- AUDSCAN.ZIP ( 8767 bytes) AudioScan V1 04/13/93 by Adam Gott
- DBS_FAQ.ZIP ( 14434 bytes) Direct Broadcast Satellite FAQ by
- Rich Peterson
- FNL_GI.ZIP ( 18157 bytes) Gary Bourgois SNL interview W/Jim
- Shelton, 08/13/93
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 41358 bytes in 3 file(s)
-
-
- Total of 482613 bytes in 9 file(s)
-
- Files are available via Anonymous-FTP from ftp.fidonet.org
- IP NET address 140.98.2.1
-
- Directories are:
- pub/fidonet/ham/hamnews (Bulletins)
- /hamant (Antennas)
- /hamsat (Sat. prg/Amsat Bulletins)
- /hampack (Packet)
- /hamelec (Formulas)
- /hamtrain (Training Material)
- /hamlog (Logging Programs)
- /hamcomm (APLink/JvFax/Rtty/etc)
- /hammods (Equip modification)
- /hamswl (SWBC Skeds/Frequencies)
- /hamscan (Scanner Frequencies)
- /hamutil (Operating aids/utils)
- /hamsrc (Source code to programs)
- /hamdemo (Demos of new ham software)
- /hamnos (TCP/IP and NOS related software)
-
- Files may be downloaded via land-line at (214) 226-1181 or (214) 226-1182.
- 1.2 to 16.8K, 23 hours a day .
-
- When ask for Full Name, enter: Guest;guest <return>
-
- lee - wa5eha
- Ham Distribution Net
-
-
- * Origin: Ham Distribution Net Coordinator / Node 1 (1:124/7009)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 17 Dec 1993 21:54:08
- From: sdd.hp.com!nigel.msen.com!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!eff!news.kei.com!news.oc.com!utacfd.uta.edu!rwsys!ocitor!FredGate@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: HDN Releases
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- The following files were processed Friday 12-17-93:
-
-
- HAMDEMO [ HAM: Amateur Radio Demo Progs ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- NECYAGIS.ZIP ( 98195 bytes) Analyze Yagi-Uda antenna designs
- by K6STI
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 98195 bytes in 1 file(s)
-
-
- HAMLOG [ HAM: Amateur radio logging programs ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- PA1200B.ZIP ( 93546 bytes) Pa QSO Party Contest Log by KM3D
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 93546 bytes in 1 file(s)
-
-
- HAMNEWS [ HAM: Bulletins and Newsletters ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- ANART789.LZH ( 5359 bytes) ANART Bulletin 789 12/12/93
- ARLB116.LZH ( 894 bytes) ARRL Bulletin 12/13/93
- ARLD068.LZH ( 615 bytes) ARRL DX Bulletin 12/14/93
- OPDX-1.LZH ( 893 bytes) OPDX/NODXA DX Survey for 1993
- OPDX139.LZH ( 2437 bytes) Ohio-Pa Packet Cluster DX Bulletin
- 12/13/93
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 10198 bytes in 5 file(s)
-
-
- HAMSAT [ HAM: Satellite tracking and finding programs ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- AMSAT345.LZH ( 4663 bytes) AMSAT Bulletin # 345 12/11/93
- ARLK052.LZH ( 2056 bytes) ARRL Keps 12/11/93
- SPC1213.LZH ( 2721 bytes) SPACE Bulletin 12/13/93
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 9440 bytes in 3 file(s)
-
-
- HAMSWL [ HAM: Shortwave broadcast schedule distribution ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- IRRS_LNG.LZH ( 1225 bytes) IRRS Language Schedule effective
- 12/01/93
- IRRS_PRG.LZH ( 2029 bytes) IRRS Program Schedule effective
- 12/01/93
- IRRS_SCH.LZH ( 1193 bytes) IRRS SWBC Schedule effective
- 12/01/93
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 4447 bytes in 3 file(s)
-
-
- HAMUTIL [ HAM: Radio operating aids ]
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- DX2TEXT.ZIP ( 7729 bytes) Create Editable text files from
- DX.DAT file by AA0JS
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- 7729 bytes in 1 file(s)
-
-
- Total of 223555 bytes in 14 file(s)
-
- Files are available via Anonymous-FTP from ftp.fidonet.org
- IP NET address 140.98.2.1
-
- Directories are:
- pub/fidonet/ham/hamnews (Bulletins)
- /hamant (Antennas)
- /hamsat (Sat. prg/Amsat Bulletins)
- /hampack (Packet)
- /hamelec (Formulas)
- /hamtrain (Training Material)
- /hamlog (Logging Programs)
- /hamcomm (APLink/JvFax/Rtty/etc)
- /hammods (Equip modification)
- /hamswl (SWBC Skeds/Frequencies)
- /hamscan (Scanner Frequencies)
- /hamutil (Operating aids/utils)
- /hamsrc (Source code to programs)
- /hamdemo (Demos of new ham software)
- /hamnos (TCP/IP and NOS related software)
-
- Files may be downloaded via land-line at (214) 226-1181 or (214) 226-1182.
- 1.2 to 16.8K, 23 hours a day .
-
- When ask for Full Name, enter: Guest;guest <return>
-
- lee - wa5eha
- Ham Distribution Net
-
-
- * Origin: Ham Distribution Net Coordinator / Node 1 (1:124/7009)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 15 Dec 93 00:24:47 GMT
- From: goanna.cs.rmit.oz.au!aggedor.rmit.EDU.AU!harbinger.cc.monash.edu.au!msuinfo!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!sgiblab!news.cs.indiana.edu!noose.ecn.purdue@munnari.oz.au
- Subject: Log-EQF (again)
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I misplaced the info from the discussion a couple of weeks ago. Could someone
- tell me where LOG-EQF is archived? I have checked the usual sites and cannot
- find it by that name. I had a copy but it got trashed during a recent HD
- crash.
-
- vy 73
- --scott
- --
- Scott Stembaugh - N9LJX internet: n9ljx@ecn.purdue.edu
- Operations Supervisor, ADPC phone: 317 494 7946
- Purdue University
- West Lafayette, IN 47907-1061
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 18 Dec 93 14:15 PST
- From: sgi!cdp!corwin@ames.arpa
- Subject: Still waiting for license, much lo
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I guess it just took a little whining into the ether...
- It came today (Sat.).
- Corwin Nichols
- KE6DPI
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 21 Dec 93 06:21:58 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: subscribe
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- subscribe dist-ham rr ross
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 20 Dec 1993 15:45:40 GMT
- From: netcomsv!netcom.com!btoback@decwrl.dec.com
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <1993Dec14.012520.27012@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>, <1993Dec14.151407.3179@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>, <CI9FHu.3tG@ve3ppe.isis.org>
- Subject : Re: Bravo, Bravo +, etc. pager options and programming ?
-
- In article <CI9FHu.3tG@ve3ppe.isis.org> znha@ve3ppe.isis.org (Gordon Dey) writes:
- > [List of advantages of various kinds of pagers]
- > 3. You can know that somebody can "put the touch" on you almost
- > anywhere, except deep in the bowels of a computer-oriented company.
- > This includes the freeway, store, church, or when you need to get
- > out of a particularly nasty meeting. (Heh heh heh!)
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- The paging company I use (SkyTel, aka National Satellite Paging) offers a
- time-of-day page. You tell the terminal (via touch-tone input) the date and
- time you want a page, and it pages you within a minute or two of that time.
- Excellent for creating socially-acceptable excuses to leave meetings,
- parties, visits with the in-laws, etc.
-
- It seems to me there may be a market for a stand-alone device of this type.
-
- -- Bruce Toback
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V93 #1488
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