Comment by zitterbewegung
8 years ago
No, the endpoints are communicated through radio but they are linked using a system similar to VOIP.
8 years ago
No, the endpoints are communicated through radio but they are linked using a system similar to VOIP.
Then why don't you just use the internet in the first place, and skip the license and expensive equipment?
Ya I agree (as a ham). No point in using internet linked repeaters as a reason to get into ham radio. If you have a ham radio, sure, play around with it, but it is kinda pointless. It doesn't exactly teach you how to communicate when the internet doesn't work. -K0COW
Just because they're connected to the internet doesn't immediately invalidate their use. We've got the PNW DMR network up here[1] that gives you tons of coverage where cellphones don't[2] all through a linked repeater system.
We had an emergency a while back where someone got stranded up on the mountain due to a flat tire and they were diabetic so it was an urgent situation. In that case just hitting one repeater they were able to raise anyone in WA state that was listening vs just the local repeater.
Ham radio is a different thing to different people so just because you don't see value in it doesn't mean that others don't find it interesting and a reason to get into the hobby.
As a younger ham it's super frustrating to see this attitude whenever anything internet and/or packet related comes up that people dump on because it's not the thing that they enjoy.
[1] http://trbo.org/pnw/index.html
[2] http://trbo.org/pnw/images/heatmaps/WA-Combined.jpg
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True, but you are not going to be able to use 2m/70cm/1.25 to talk to people over vast distances.
While EchoLink doesn't have the same visceral feel that a radio has in your hands, it can be interesting. By connecting those repeaters to EchoLink I can directly broadcast on them. Which is pretty fun.
The other day when it was snowing like hell in Chicago I had a nice chat with a mobile ham using a 2m repeater on the big island of Hawaii.
I think I can understand part of the reason why - it's kind of a gatekeeping device. You're guaranteed to meet someone who at least has one interest similar to yours, and someone who's gone through the trouble of getting a license and a radio. It's not like going to ChatRoulette and clicking around until you get tired of seeing genitals.
For (practically) any given interest, there's a way to find someone else with the same interest somewhere else that you can ask to Skype with.
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I thought it was a nice example of new stuff in Amateur radio. In retrospect I should have mentioned the new digital modes.