User Tools

Site Tools


blog:2020-07-12:the_uncertain_future_of_ham_radio

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
blog:2020-07-12:the_uncertain_future_of_ham_radio [2020/07/12 17:52] va7fiblog:2020-07-12:the_uncertain_future_of_ham_radio [2021/06/05 12:34] (current) va7fi
Line 3: Line 3:
 An interesting article on the [[https://spectrum.ieee.org/telecom/wireless/the-uncertain-future-of-ham-radio |IEEE Spectrum website]] describes some of the current challenges that ham radio faces. An interesting article on the [[https://spectrum.ieee.org/telecom/wireless/the-uncertain-future-of-ham-radio |IEEE Spectrum website]] describes some of the current challenges that ham radio faces.
  
-One of the big questions is: what could draw younger people to ham radio?  People used to be drawn to ham radio for its ability to: +One of the big questions is: what could draw younger people to ham radio?  People used to be drawn to ham radio for its ability to provide
-  * Contact others while mobile or away from the home. Now we have cell phones. +  * Communications with others while mobile or away from the home. Now we have cell phones. 
-  * Communicate with others around the globe. Now we have the internet.   +  * Communications With others around the globe. Now we have the internet.   
-  * Tinker and build equipment using the latest technologies. Now kids learn to program computers.+  * A platform to tinker and build equipment using the latest technologies. Now kids learn to program computers.
  
-"Instead, many [younger hams] are interested in the capacity for public service, such as providing communications in the wake of a disaster, or event comms for activities like city marathons."+<QUOTE>Instead, many [younger hams] are interested in the capacity for public service, such as providing communications in the wake of a disaster, or event comms for activities like city marathons.</QUOTE>
  
 +Since the radio spectrum that ham operators use is a finite resource (in greater demand today), this raises a debate as to whether ham radio should be seen as a hobby or a public utility (see this [[blog/2019-09-07/monitoring_winlink_messages |previous post]]).((My personal opinion on this debate is that ham radio should be both a hobby and a public utility, but it should stay "open" in the sense that every transmission intercepted should be easily decodable.))
  
 +On the bright side, cheap Chinese radios and SDRs are lowering the bar of entry for new hams in terms of cost, but even that can be a contentious issue.
  
 +<QUOTE>As Michel, the former ARRL CEO, puts it: `Every ham has [their] own perspective. What we’ve learned over the hundred-plus years is that there will always be these battles -- AM modulation versus single-sideband modulation, whatever it may be. The technology evolves. And the marketplace will follow where the interests lie.</QUOTE>
  
- 
-Another issue is that ham radio uses a finite resource that is in greater demand today: the radio spectrum.  If we stop using our allocated slices of the spectrum, it's very easy to imagine that it will be allocated to other groups. 
- 
- 
- 
-"Sustained interest is essential because potential hams must clear a particular barrier before they can take to the airwaves: a licensing exam." 
blog/2020-07-12/the_uncertain_future_of_ham_radio.1594601548.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/07/12 17:52 by va7fi