it cant! the ham can move and keep the old call so all bets for
location are off! ----Ed#
In a message dated 11/16/2015 9:23:06 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
kurtk7 at
visi.com writes:
We did get a location and a good thread conversation.
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 16, 2015, at 10:21 PM, Adrian Stoness
<tdk.knight at gmail.com>
wrote:
now ur mocking us none radio peeps
i should go take my cert i do tower work allot installing equipment would
prolly help me with my job....infact today i installed 3 120degree
sectors
lol
> On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 8:17 PM, js at
cimmeri.com <js at cimmeri.com> wrote:
>
>
> . . / . - - - . . - . . .
>
>
>> On 11/16/2015 9:00 PM, drlegendre . wrote:
>>
>> Guess you'll have to forgive those of us in the "Classicmp
enthusiast"
>> group that don't overlap into the "HAM operator" group.
>>
>> I for one had no idea that a member's location could be pinned-down (to
>> within shipping zones?) using a HAM callsign. Not all of us share the
same
>> areas of interest and / or levels of
knowledge.
>>
>> Don't make so many assumptions.
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 6:34 PM, wulfman<wulfman at wulfman.com> wrote:
>>
>> With SDR one and the same these days.
>>>
>>>
>>>> On 11/16/2015 5:07 PM, ben wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 11/16/2015 4:57 PM, Mark J. Blair wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Only other ham radio operators tend to recognize ham radio
callsigns
>>>> and know how to look them up.