Ham Radio Repeater On The Moon? 133
kd5biv writes "QRZ.com has an interesting article on Martin Reeves' project to put a small amateur radio repeater on the surface of the Moon. The project includes a Surveyor-style lander with a UHF translator, a directional antenna aimed at Earth, remote controllable cameras, and some other interesting features.
If they can solve the basic problem of putting a package that size on the lunar surface, it will make moonbounce operations much easier and cheaper. Then again, a satellite about that size is still waiting for a ride on an Ariane-5 out of Kourou and it's only going to a sun-synchronous orbit .. we shall see how it works out .. "
Good thing ham radio isn't dead (Score:2)
But still, the test is easy (w/o Morse code). I passed it by taking practice exams on the Internet and studying out of a study guide.
This post is dangerous (Score:1)
FluX
After 16 years, MTV has finally completed its deevolution into the shiny things network
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
How long before we /. the moon? (Score:1)
Who needs ham radios anyway? (Score:2)
A repeator on the moon would make sence if you are ok with a repeater that is mostly there at night and only sometimes during the day, if you agree with a repeater that takes over 2.5 seconds to propagate your message (1 1/3 sec. one way) if you are ok with the fact that the signal you send will be only 1/100 of the power when it comes back to this planet, if you agree that the money should be spent to design a repeater so robust that will be able to withstand -150C for 15 days (lunar night) and than +150C for the other 15 days (lunar day).
So, who the hell cares, with 2.5 latency I wouldn't even dare talking about playing Quake over Ham Radio, but that could be a legitimate purpose for it...
Good troll, however: (Score:1)
Good readers of Slashdot, this is The real Steven Woston's website. [mnc.co.za]
I'll let the site speak for itself.
A kind request to the troll who's impersonating Steve: Please stop doing this, and ruining Slashdot for the thousands of Slashdot readers who enjoy the intelligent debates sparked by the Slashdot news items.
This is a great site, but we should be wary of Trolls taking over.
Cheers, CV.
Didn't say it was a *good* idea, just interesting. (Score:1)
I just like the thought of making EME sideband contacts with something less than a kilowatt of PEP and an antenna stack that won't fit in my back yard
Oh, BTW, once you post your callsign you're not anonymous anymore.
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Christopher Columbus arrives in what he believes to be "India", but which RMS informs him is actually "GNU/India".
This is the funniest thing I've read this month!
I love this idea! (Score:1)
Another idea: piggyback on one of NASA's long-range probes that might be using the moon for a slingshot. Being a replacement for ballast on a flight has gotten several of our satellites into orbit.
Re:I'm not a Ham radio enthusiast... (Score:2)
Ham radio operators are allowed to use several bands ranging from 1.800 MHz (close to AM broadcast) well up into the microwave spectrum. These were originally spaced at "harmonic" intervals to reduce the chance of interference to other radio services. Some of the lower frequency bands will be effected by ionosphereic refraction. The higher ones will not.
As far a radio wave propagation behavior goes: The ionosphere will usually reflect signals at or less than the 10-meter band (aprx 28.000 MHz). Ten meters is the transition band where the ionosphere is less likely to refract the signal back toward the earth. This is far from a hinderance because it allows modest equipment to easily work thousands of miles over the earth's surface. UHF signals (above 300 MHz) will usually just go right out into space. (However, "tropospheric ducting" can "catch" a VHF or UHF transmittion and carry it several hundred miles or more under the right conditions over land.)
Moon-bounce work is usually done from 144 MHz through just under 1300 MHz. Without a repeater, it is required to run nearly full legal output power (1.5 KW PEP) into a huge antenna array that focuses the radio waves into a tight concentrated beam. The return signals are also very weak and require the same antenna setup to receive them. Having a repeater with a sensitive antenna and an active transmitter will reduce both the power output and antenna requirements for the transmitting station, and the pre-amplifier and antenna requirements on the receiving end.
Anyone care to elaborate? (Score:1)
If someone could elaborate a little bit, I'm sure a lot of us would appreciate it..
Re:Good thing ham radio isn't dead (Score:3)
HAM's have been way ahead of the game, too. Long before cell phones, HAM operators were setting up phone patches. so with a little HT (a handheld radio, or Handy-Talky) you could patch through the local repeater and phone your friends. Way cool back in the day.
Then, HAM's have been doing wireless digital transmission for a long time, too. For many decades, HAM's could log, via RTTY and packet radio, into various bulletin boards, some of which connect to the internet.
In QST, that journal of the ARRL, some old timers were criticizing the internet (unjustly so, IMHO) for breeding too many computer-savvy folks that are too complacent with their computers, and thus not wanting to pursue a hobby in radio. Of course, the internet is the new medium, just like ham radio drew people from the realms of horse-riding instead (or other similar analogy).
But it's an interesting history, of an especially interesting and total geek subject :-) Sometimes, the techs treat radio like operating systems. THey spend more time building/tweaking them then they do using them!
Re:Good thing ham radio isn't dead (Score:1)
No, but you wouldn't want to spend too much time near high-power antennas. Especially microwave antennas.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I'm not a Ham radio enthusiast... (Score:1)
My question should have been more of:
Across what frequency ranges does the earth's atmosphere pass emf, and which frequencies are 'trapped' within the atmosphere...
I could figure it out, but I figured some ppl would know offhand, and I didn't want to drag out Cheng's _Field and Wave Electromagnetics_ and scrawl out some radiation equations...
Lunar repeaters are a bad idea (Score:5)
The moon is a long way away, about 400,000 km. That's 10x the distance to geostationary orbit, meaning signals in each direction are 20 decibels (100 times) weaker than from geostationary orbit. The speed of light delay between earth and moon is 1 1/3 seconds each way.
It is far more costly in terms of fuel to land on the moon than to reach geostationary orbit. It's also far more technically demanding. The moon has no atmosphere to slow a parachute, so all that velocity has to be removed with retrorockets. Those rockets have to be controlled by landing radars. And a soft lunar landing is obviously a lot less forgiving than a geostationary orbit maneuver.
The surface of the moon is a far more hostile place for electronics than geostationary orbit. It's dark for two weeks at a time, when the temperature drops to hundreds of degrees below zero. Something has to keep your payload powered and warm during those lunar nights, and it's unlikely hams will ever get permission to fly nuclear power sources (the only practical way to do it). Lunar surface payloads that weren't nuclear powered (e.g., Surveyor and the Apollo 11 ALSEP) had very short life spans.
The trend is now in the other direction, from geostationary orbit to low earth orbit. Even though many more satellites are needed in LEO to provide global coverage than from geostationary orbit, the lower path losses and reduced propagation delays tip the scales in favor of LEO.
Phil Karn, KA9Q, AMSAT technical volunteer and former member of the board of directors
communications (Score:1)
kind of like slashdot.
more DNS restructuring (Score:2)
DAGNABBIT! That means we need to add another level to the DNS hierarchy for all the planets.
I can see it already. My domain name is going to grow to something like www.christtrek.web.us.te.
Of course, the question remains whether satellites fall under the domain of the primary body or get their own TLD. And someone's going to petition for "domain name rights" for asteroids and other minor planets.
Size (Score:1)
Re:Uah.. (Score:2)
Yes, that's pretty unlikely, since this century ends in just over 7 months.
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Moonbounce? (Score:1)
Re:Because you know you are wrong (Score:1)
This might come in handy.... but.... (Score:1)
If Fox Mulder can get near the alien craft's ham radio.... *hmm*
Maybe he can send a message to Director Skinner for some help!
What a way to start the next season!
Amazing... (Score:1)
Perhaps we should set up a Troll Board for the trolls; every once in a while they do turn out a true gem, even if they're as close to the proverbial million monkeys on a million typewriters as we'll ever see in this world. On the Troll Board, the "regular" rules of Slashdot don't apply. But troll anywhere else, instant bitchslap. This gives the trolls a place to troll, while keeping Slashdot free for its intended purpose: technical discussion.
I'm not a Ham radio enthusiast... (Score:1)
Shortwave signals are bounced back off of the earth's upper atmosphere, as are other signal ranges (AM to some extent, I thought that UHF did, too)... Does ham radio fall into this range, where any of the various layers of the atmosphere (ionosphere most notably) will prevent them from reaching the moon, and vice-versa? If you are only worried about communications outside of the atmosphere, that would be neat, but... there doesn't seem to be a lot of call for that yet.
Neat idea though...
Maybe I should ask KC2BUU and KC2BUT (two friends...)
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Excellent! Very funny, and possibly the most moderated post I've seen (Twelve?!)
dylan_-
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The "Moon": A Ridiculous Liberal Myth (Score:4)
Documentaries such as Enemy of the State have accurately portrayed the elaborate, byzantine network of surveillance satellites that the liberals have sent into space to spy on law-abiding Americans. Equipped with technology developed by Handgun Control, Inc., these satellites have the ability to detect firearms from hundreds of kilometers up. That's right, neighbors
Of course, this all works fine during the day, but what about at night? Even the liberals can't control the rotation of the Earth to prevent nightfall from setting in (only Joshua was able to ask for that particular favor!) That's where the "moon" comes in. Powered by nuclear reactors, the "moon" is nothing more than an enormous balloon, emitting trillions of candlepower of gun-revealing light. Piloted by key members of the liberal community, the "moon" is strategically moved across the country, pointing out those who dare to make use of their God-given rights at night!
Yes, I know this probably sounds paranoid and preposterous, but consider this. Despite what the revisionist historians tell you, there is no mention of the "moon" anywhere in literature or historical documents -- anywhere -- before 1950. That is when it was initially launched. When President Josef Kennedy, at the State of the Union address, proclaimed "We choose to go to the moon", he may as well have said "We choose to go to the weather balloon." The subsequent faking of a "moon" landing on national TV was the first step in a long history of the erosion of our constitutional rights by leftists in this country. No longer can we hide from our government when the sun goes down.
Next Big Thing in Ham Radio? Nope, that's APRS... (Score:3)
This is just another pie in the sky thing that will never fly. The author seems to want something that will 'save' Ham Radio. Well, I'll give him two, both of which have already happened:
Kill the "Old Geezer" Licensing System
Tie Amateur Radio and the New Geekdom together
The first happened April 15th when the FCC (in the United States) decided to eliminate for all practical purposes the testing of Morse code proficiency. (N.B., other countries have done it already.) All you need now to get 99.99995% of the frequencies is knowlege of radio theory and electronics. And, people responded--the FCC was deluged with 20,000 applications for new licenses and upgrades.
The second, which is FAR more important, is the leverage of the Internet savvy, /.-reading, computer-programming, gizmo-hacking crowd into amateur radio. A new mode of Ham Radio operating, the Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS) ties HF, VHF, UHF, and microwave radio, satellites, the Internet, Palm Pilots, GPS, real-time mapping, and nomadness into one juggernaut of technology. Interested? Check out www.aprs.net [aprs.net] and www.tapr.org [tapr.org]
control station? (Score:1)
what if the repeater goes down? (like the ones around here do all the time)
Re:Anyone care to elaborate? (Score:4)
Ham radio had it's origins at the dawn of the discovery of radio. I.E. that you could send useful information by a wireless means. Experimentation was encouraged to find useful ways of sending information using this new technology. And, everyone was allowed to participate at that time free of licensing restrictions.
As the commercial implications of radio were realized, the government created the FCC to regulate both the commercial use of radio and experimentation in the field. This was to address issues and complaints of interference.
Amatuer radio operators (hams) also had to be regulated by frequency restrictions. Also, certain minimum standards were established to reduce interference with commercial interests. In order to become a licensed ham operator, you have to pass a license examination that requires some knowledge of radio, electronics and FCC regulations.
Today, Ham radio still has the same basic goal: To provide a hobby that enhances the technical art of radio, communications and electrical engineering. Many new modes of digital communication have been created recently. Packet radio--from the late-80's--simulates the function of a wide area network; whereas your own station can be a "router", a "client", or a "server" of sorts. Also, PSK-31 is a very recent mode that allows nearly error free weak signal communication in the extremely narrow bandwidth of 30Hz.
Hams also participate in emergency situautions where no other means of communication are possible. During hurricanes, earth quakes and tornadoes this invaluable service has made them known.
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:2)
(+6, Funny!!)
Re:Lunar repeaters are a bad idea (Score:3)
Re:Anyone care to elaborate? (Score:1)
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Re:Geeks, get your amateur radio license! (Score:1)
Then what's the point of testing?
What are the benefits? Well, it's a good way to communicate,
To a very limited number of old geezers.
even in out of the way places,
where you can talk to yourself because: No one else is on the freq; The repeater is down (again); The net is down (again); Etc.
and it's free.
If you don't mind spending $400 or more for a radio.
There are lots of nifty things you can do with digital transmissions in the amateur radio band.
If you don't mind 1bps throughput.
So, go out and get your license.
I did. And then I got continuous flak for being a no-code (ie: not a "Real Ham")
A reasonable handheld transmitter/receiver will cost you under $200 and is a good way to get started.
"Started" is a very appropriate term, because now you'll need a spare battery ($30), an extra charger ($60), a decent antenna for that HT ($30), a fancy holster for it ($20), etc.
Or you can buy a cel phone and talk to anyone about anything nearly anywhere.
For the test itself, you won't need more than a $20 book.
Plus testing fees, etc.
Ham Radio is a great hobby for teaching basic electronics to children, but it's days of technology advancement are long gone.
Yes, I'm a Ham. I did packet radio. I participated in Field Days. I chatted on one of the first and largest 2M repeater networks. But the day I discovered 14.4 modems and local BBSs, my days wasted on Ham Radio were over.
Thanks to the Hams of the past who advanced technology to the point they did. But their work is done now. I believe the Human race has the technology of long-distance wireless communication figured out now.
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Re:Better lander technology (Score:1)
Someone who did a little bit more math....
Re:Amazing... (Score:1)
A separate Troll Board would destroy the whole point of trolling!
Trolls are _supposed_ to post offtopic posts in random discussions! (For reasons that are only known to them).
Any real troll would never use the Troll Board because, being "authorized" it wouldn't be trolling!
Big Bang pshaw! (Score:1)
And what kind of braindead meat bag doesn't know that the earth revolves around the hottub at the Choo-Choo hotel in Chattanooga Tennessee? I can prove that too, although it involves ingestion of a sub-leathal amount of belladonna.
"depends on how you count. If your criterium is 'what place is a holy place for most religions' then you have a point. "
Yeah he's got a point, too bad it's on the top of his head.
"I'll swallow your soul!" -Unidentified Kandarian Demon
Re:Next Big Thing in Ham Radio? Nope, that's APRS. (Score:2)
The second, which is FAR more important, is the leverage of the Internet savvy,
Ummmm, no.
Look, I suppose (at 35) that you can call me an "old geezer" because I've got an Amateur Extra class license (KA8KPN) which I got in '81 so I wouldn't have to remember any of the stupid HF sub-band edges. Those were the days of 20 WPM CW requirements and the whole nine yards. I've watched the rise of the "let's turn ham radio into wireless networking" brigade in amateur radio and wondered about all those people who don't seem to have a freaking clue about why some people become radio amateurs, and others don't.
Amateur radio is not and, furthermore, will never be about technology. Not primarily. Many people who are interested in ham radio are those that are interested, not in the technology of radio, but in using radio to find out about the differing cultures spread all over the world even where the Internet doesn't reach. Others are interested in the challenge involved in radio communications over long distances or through other difficulty. The gadgeteers (of which Mr. QuantumHack certainly appears to be one) are actually a small minority in the hobby.
In short, the "Internet savvy, /.-reading, computer-programming gizmo-hacking crowd" looks at ham radio---and yawns. The OC3 they've got coming in to their office is a lot sexier than amateur packet radio will ever be. Not when a "9600 baud" packet radio link (the highest in current use) typically gets about a 20 CPS throughput and the setup required costs considerably more than the cost of the equipment required to do 11 MB/s wireless networking which, incidentally, doesn't require a license or much of anything else.
If you're interested in moving data, then DSL or cable modems allow you to do that at higher speed and you don't have to pass a test, or wait for a license, or cut any trees down to make way for Microwaves. You just set up your server and go. No need to involve radio in it.
You know, ham radio is a lot like hiking. People who hike are interested in hiking, not travelling from place to place with a maximum of efficiency. They're interested in the challenge of getting places far off the beaten track and the interesting scenery they'll see on the way.
The people to whom Mr. QuantumHack's vision of amateur radio might appeal are not interested in a leisurely stroll through the backwoods of communications technology, which is just where that vision puts them.
Not that a lunar repeater is necessarily a good idea, but this "juggernaut of technology" is just as dumb in a different way.
Up up up! (Score:1)
Re:Good thing ham radio isn't dead (Score:1)
N8USK - http://www.ohioaprs.net/
Moon Soft Land? (Score:2)
Flying on the Shuttle (Score:1)
Re:Anyone care to elaborate? (Score:5)
The "ham" in ham radio is a strange abbreviation of "amateur." The amateur radio service is chartered by the FCC in America, and other government bodies in other nations.
The government has allocated parts of the radio spectrum for hams to use. It's not restricted to high or low frequencies -- there are ham bands up and down the dial, from a few MHz to the GHz range, and everything in between.
In return for getting radio spectrum, hams have a moral responsibility to further the radio arts and provide emergency communications in time of need. That's the spirit of the deal. In practice, a ham doesn't have to do anything he doesn't want to. Just obey the rules -- no swearing, no commercial use, no broadcast entertainment, ID yourself often -- and you are fine.
Most hams do often use their radios ("rigs") for the public good though -- calling in car accidents, stranded motorists, that kind of thing. I do that all the time. Used my HT (Handheld Transciever) once to call in aid for an injured mountain biker I found. Where I was there would have been no cell coverage, either.
You do have to take a Federal test to get your ham ticket, and there are harder tests required o get more privileges. But even the entry-level license lets a geek have a LOT of fun. If you have half a brain you can cram for the test in a weekend. If you have any electronics experience, you might be able to cram for it in a day.
When you pass your test you get a call sign. This is how you ID yourself on the air. Your call sign is analogous to a commercial broadcaster's call sign like KROQ or KNBC. The first call you get is long, like mine: KF6IYW. As you advance in the ham tests, your call gets shorter (provided there are vacant calls to move you up to). A ham with a call like NO6B is a stud.
Ham radio is cool because you have a lot of options and there are neat toys to buy. You can talk across town on a pocket-sized radio, or blacken the sky with a monstrous antenna over your home with which you talk to the other side of the planet. You can build a transmitter and try to get Morse code to the other side of the country with a few watts of power. It's about problem solving and electronics as much as communication for a lot of people.
Me, I like the pocket-sized stuff. Does it replace a cell phone? No, but it makes a damn good supplement -- and it doubles as a police scanner, FM radio, and TV audio receiver. You can't stay in touch with a mess of people at once, with no per-minute fees with a cell phone.
Last common question people have is "how far can that thing talk?" A small handheld radio -- cellphone sized -- can let you talk to someone 100 miles away, or more, if there are convenient repeaters. I commonly use an HT to talk to friends all over the LA area, sometimes farther. A powerful rig that operates on lower frequencies can talk to anywhere on earth, if conditions are good. Some nuts even put this stuff in their cars. That's too much for me.
There, all you ever wanted to know about ham radio...
Possible Peace Dividend (Score:2)
It's still not going to be cheap. The numbers I've heard are on the order of $10 million for an SS-18 launch. But if you can find a commerical partner going in the same direction, it may be an option, and likely a lot cheaper than most other launch options.
They'd get the domain too. (Score:2)
.mo I guess.
Remove (Score:1)
Re:Geeks, get your amateur radio license! (Score:1)
To a very limited number of old geezers.
I'm in my mid-20's, and I find it very useful. It's great when you're driving, etc.
And then I got continuous flak for being a no-code (ie: not a "Real Ham")
I'm a no-code, and I don't get this flak. Then again, I found a group of folks to hang with that aren't a bunch of old-timers who care about such things.
N8USK - http://ohioaprs.net [ohioaprs.net]
Re:Better lander technology (Score:1)
"Ah reckon they gon' hafta use propane fer that, Bubba."
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Re:Let ham radio die - reuse the spectrum for IP (Score:1)
Amateur Radio has done IP on it's frequencies for years.
We have our own domain: ampr.org.
We have our own IP space: 44/8.
Phil Karn, KA9Q who posted earlier developed one of the first freely available Network Operating Systems (KA9Q NOS) which made it possible to use IP from your DOS machine either over modems, LAN or Amateur Radio AX.25 over the radio. (Hi Phil. Very cool that you read /.)
Admittedly the data speed has been rather slow, 56k probably being the high-end, but folks over at TAPR [tapr.org] are working on a 900Mhz FHSS radio that would go to 128k or above.
There's plenty of bandwidth available to do what you want, provided you have the technical know-how and the desire. You want a 2mbit point-to-point wireless link? Do it up around 2.4ghz.
Anything's possible if you want to do it badly enough.
N8USK - http://ohioaprs.net [ohioaprs.net]
You don't get it. (Score:1)
Re:Maintenance? (Score:1)
Re:Who needs ham radios anyway? (Score:2)
In any case, as soon as you travel outside an urban area, cell phones stop working, but there are often ham radio operators around.
Obviously, there are network effects at work here as well: the more people use ham radio, the more fun it is, so sign up...
Re:Geeks, get your amateur radio license! (Score:2)
For anybody technically inclined (like most people on /.), it shouldn't be hard. If you need your ego stroked, you can still feel satisfied that for the population at large, it's probably a non-trivial test.
Re:Better lander technology (Score:1)
Bill.
Re:Uah.. (Score:2)
The amount of gravity on the moon is fairly weak, so the human body would degenerate significantly while living on it. It wouldn't be as bad as living on Mir for years, but it's still not good.
It is exposed to a lot of radiation, since it has no atmosphere. This would mean you'd more or less have to live in a thick stone building, which isn't the romantic bubble dome lifestyle Star Trek would have one think.
I don't believe there's much in terms of resources one could use to fabricate most of the requirements of life. So you'd need frequent shuttle trips to bring supplies. Of course one could argue that once you've left the earth, traveling from orbit to the moon isn't overly costly. For a long term settlement, though, you'd want a bit more ease.
Though Mars has about 1/3 the gravity of earth, it's definitely an improvement over the moon. It's slightly better in terms of resources, since there's frozen water (caps, permafrost,
Of course if there're problems, it's also a lot farther away. Still, I'd rather shoot for a real planet, and leave the moon alone.
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Dave
Re:Thats not true... (Score:1)
Cripes, no wonder nerds have such a bad reputation for being so self-absorbed. If it's not interesting to you, then don't frigging read it... I sure as hell won't miss your whiney uninteresting crap. I don't find HAM radio interesting either, but I managed to respect those who do. Why? Perhaps it's because I'm an adult - you know, those of us who don't necessarily have to get our own way at every possible turn. Don't worry, you'll get there eventually, big guy.
I guess we've still got a few more rounds of nerd-evolution to go before we finally weed out the true losers in the bunch.
Gotcha. (Score:1)
I caught the reference... very nice. I was thinking it too.
Re:Better lander technology (Score:1)
Maybe we should launch something that would maintain a low orbit in Mars' atmosphere...gain a few readings of landing sites, atmospheric gases, etc...
Re:The "Moon": A Ridiculous Liberal Myth (Score:1)
Let ham radio die - reuse the spectrum for IP (Score:1)
"IP over everything!"
(Off Topic) Ham Radio is like Sailing... almost... (Score:1)
Each is based on one or more mature technologies that are used in commerce & transport today.
Each uses only a tiny bit of its "medium" - frequency spectrum or seaways, resp.
Yet, one hobby seems to be under regulatory pressure, at least here in Australia (the land of censorship):
Just last week, we learned that in response to an individual complaint, the Australian Communications Authority (ACA) has informed the Wireless Institure of Australia (WIA) - Australia's national fraternal body of radio hams (like USA's ARRL), that some long-running practices (14 years, in one state) will no longer be tolerated.
You may ask: What are these evil practices?
Simply: the on-air listing of individuals' excess electronic parts & radio gear for sale, in WIA's weekly, on-air broadcast to hams.
It takes no more than 5 minutes of a typical 30-55 minute broadcast... but, now, it's been stopped... by a government edict.
Why...?
Well, in law, ham radio is (quite rightly, in many minds) to be "free of pecuniary interests" - like an amateur sailor who, I suppose, can't legally carry goods or people on his sail-boat
- for money
.However, here, nobody was paying money to get their gear listed on-air, just as nobody pays to post a 'for sale' ad on their Sailing Club's bulletin board.
There was -no- pecuniary interest; people were simply helping each other... by swapping, selling or buying - often just giving away - their excess items, whether homebuild or manufactured.
ACA's harsh interpretation of an old law was unduly heavy-handed and violates the rights of individuals.
It has lead to a ban on a practice that helped keep rural hams involved in the equipment recycle-loop with their city cousins.
Remember that, in many Australian bush areas, the Internet (which would make it easy to stay in touch) is practically unavailable, with connection rates as low as 2400 baud (if that), and unreliable at any speed.
(Satelite 'net connections still require a landline link, making that technology impractical for the bush.)
But there is more to it... and that is an government unresponsive to calls for fair play, at least where valuable radio spectrum is involved.
Our Citizens Band users actually managed to free themselves of license fees (like their US counterparts), by openly defying the law which, at the time, required them to pay an annual license fee to use their radios.
(Perhaps, in Australia, 'civil disobedience macht frei'...?)
Also, like most Internet users, CBer's have no restrictions on commercial use of CB frequencies.
It's very different for the Hams...
Our more law-abiding Radio Amateurs, unlike their US counterparts, have been paying $50 dollars / year to keep their licenses, and - with them - the age-old restriction on use.
While various other media & technologies (e.g., Internet) enjoy freedom of expression, this human endeavor is strapped down tighter without reason.
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Man, you have to respect the amount of work that went into this. Clearly this is the greatest troll post of all time. Bravo!
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Re:They'd get the domain too. (Score:1)
Re:Lunar repeaters are a bad idea (Score:2)
Amateurs have communicated with space shuttles, with MIR, will communicate with the International space station, have built and launched about 50 small satellites.
Why would you think a repeater on the moon would yield so much better PR than the above feats?
IMHO (just as in Phil's) it would just be a gigantic waste of effort to build that repeater, and see that it is useless in practice. As everyone can see, it is already taking lots of resources to construct Phase 3D and get in launched, so much that even a geostationary satellite (let alone a cluster of 3) is widely seen as impossible to realize.
It is better to stay with both feet on the ground, and attempt only realistic projects. There have been enough proposals that cost a lot of effort and never became realized.
Rob
Geeks, get your amateur radio license! (Score:2)
What are the benefits? Well, it's a good way to communicate, even in out of the way places, and it's free. There are lots of nifty things you can do with digital transmissions in the amateur radio band. And people learn about interference as part of the reading material (useful for computer folks who may not be aware of the interference they are causing).
Amateur radio is one of the last refuges on the spectrum that is non-commercial and it needs new participants, or else it will slowly be taken over by commercial interests. And the digital aspects of amateur radio need new people to bring better technology and new ideas to them.
So, go out and get your license. You can get started at the ARRL [arrl.org] web site. A reasonable handheld transmitter/receiver will cost you under $200 and is a good way to get started. For the test itself, you won't need more than a $20 book.
Not really newsworthy (Score:2)
One area I do find hams a little lacking is using linux, I would have thought that the majority of individuals that pride themselves in being able to take their equipment apart and redesign it would demand an open source operating system where they have more control, but unfortunately, the majority of hams and ham related software is for windows.
Re:Are you stupid? (Score:1)
In The Last Continent by Terry Pratchett, there was a funny little quote about two pages in...
"Every tribal myth is true for a given value of true."
Re:almost (Score:1)
"Do everything and MORE..." (Score:1)
Yes, I agree, it doesn't make sense to drop a repeater on the moon, geosynchronous and/or Low Earth Orbit are the way to go. The round trip time of speed of light to the moon make interactive communication awkward. Plus, an array of satellites would probably cost the same as single lunar repeater, which would be much more susceptible to failure.
A repeator on the moon would make sence if you are ok with a repeater that is mostly there at night and only sometimes during the day.
You mean the moon spends more time on the side of the Earth facing away from the sun than the side facing towards the sun? That's news to me! (Granted, when the moon is near to eclipsing the sun, the RF noise from the sun would probably make communication impossible, so a repeater would be slightly more available at night.) But just 'cause you can't see the moon in the daytime doesn't mean it's not there!
Re:Because you know you are wrong (Score:1)
However, you can say someone is acting like a fool (or an idiot).
Loopholes...
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Re:Power storage? (Score:1)
Add an orienting solar array and charging logic, steering diodes and such and you're in pretty good shape.
And, yes, I've got a clue of what the design parameters should be for something like this.
Completely inappropriate, precanned and Offtopic! (Score:1)
Re:Maintenance? (Score:1)
Re:Good thing ham radio isn't dead (Score:1)
And no encryption is allowed either. Not cypherpunk friendly.
Open Source Space Program (Score:1)
Have an open forum for discussion of ideas.
Different entries for modules and designs.
And heres the kicker. Run it on contributions.
If its succesful, all the data gathered is made freely available under whatever liscense you prefer. Maybe have free use of the module too.
I propose an open source spy-cam so i can spy on natalie portman.
Re:HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:1)
Re:Let ham radio die - reuse the spectrum for IP (Score:1)
amateur radio still has it's benefits and is still a much valued service/endeavor. after all, what is more fun than converting an old radar detector into a 10Ghz 25mW fm transceiver?
Centralized/controlled comms are obsolete (Score:2)
The reasons? Centralized control by men in robes commanding the power to send 'round men with guns, and the severely limited bandwidth of a centralized communications hub (and let's not forget Shannon).
The fact that it's still a very enjoyable social activity and even very effective in niche applications doesn't invalidate the underlying point that amateur radio is unusable as a power building block in a world where Internet-quality communications (in both freedom and bandwidth) is an assumed minimum starting point. The reasons why the medium is so limited are of course entirely political: in principle radio amateurs could have multi-megabit, peer-to-peer dynamic networks capable of vastly more than the Internet right now (the aggregate amateur bandwidth is about 5GHz, much of it usable today), but the end result would be worthless except as a technological achievement. The gates of the amateur radio prison are still firmly shut.
Oh well, too bad. People have now discovered the freedom of the net, and as a result certain types of dinosaur will die out. It's the way of change.
But nobody cares about the moon (Score:2)
Apollo went to the moon, so what ?
As a 5 year old, I remember the excitement of the first landing. We're all geeks here, so we care about this sort of thing, but the sad fact is that the vast majority didn't give a damn beyond the initial novelty. How long is it since we went back ? Jo Sixpack doesn't care, and certainly won't want to fund any attempt to return.
Commercial space is about geosynchronous DBS and low orbit constellations. Interesting exogeology is already looking past the moon. Our most likely chance of returning to the moon is if George Lucas decides he wants it for a location shoot - no-one else is going to pay.
PS - A quick "I'm not worthy" to the illustrious creator of KA9Q. Thanks for my connectivity during a large part of the early '90s 8-)
Re:Your theology is as repellent as your politics (Score:2)
please. your lord. stopping the earth would stop nightfall.
>If the Earth did rotate, then one would expect to see tornadoes in the area at the centre of rotation. This would imply that Kansas is the centre of the Earth, a thought pleasing to my personal sympathies, but contradicted by scripture. There has never been a tornado in Jerusalem
Or Jerusalem is not the centre of the world
>Your blasphemous statement that the Moon "reflects" light from the Sun directly contradicts Genesis 3:16, in which it is made perfectly clear that "he created the moon, that the slimy crawling things by night might see". Which part of "he created", don't you understand? Your pathetic advocacy of the fraudulent theory (and it IS a THEORY, not some bourgeois, East-Coast elitist idea of a "fact") is sickening
actually, that doesn't say anything ofcourse. the above says NOTHING on the method of illumination, which could well be by reflecting the sun's light.
//rdj
HISTORY OF THE WORLD (Score:5)
100,000 B.C.: Man domesticates the AIBO.
10,000 B.C.: Civilization begins when early farmers first learn to cultivate hot grits.
3000 B.C.: Sumerians develop a primitive cuneiform perl script.
2920 B.C.: A legendary flood sweeps Slashdot, filling up a Borland / Inprise story with hundreds of offtopic posts.
1750 B.C.: Hammurabi, a Mesopotamian king, codifies the first EULA.
490 B.C.: Greek city-states unite to defeat the Persians. ESR triumphantly proclaims that the Greeks "get it".
399 B.C.: Socrates is convicted of impiety. Despite the efforts of freesocrates.com, he is forced to kill himself by drinking hemlock.
336 B.C.: Fat-Time Charlie becomes King of Macedonia and conquers Persia.
4 B.C.: Following the Star (as in hot young actress) of Bethelem, wise men travel from far away to troll for baby Jesus.
A.D. 476: The Roman Empire BSODs.
A.D. 610: The Glorious MEEPT!! founds Islam after receiving a revelation from God. Following his disappearance from Slashdot in 632, a succession dispute results in the emergence of two troll factions: the Pythonni and the Perliites.
A.D. 800: Charlemagne conquers nearly all of Germany, only to be acquired by andover.net.
A.D. 874: Linus the Red discovers Iceland.
A.D. 1000: The epic of the Beowulf Cluster is written down. It is the first English epic poem.
A.D. 1095: Pope Bruce II calls for a crusade against the Turks when it is revealed they are violating the GPL. Later investigation reveals that Pope Bruce II had not yet contacted the Turks before calling for the crusade.
A.D. 1215: Bowing to pressure to open-source the British government, King John signs the Magna Carta, limiting the British monarchy's power. ESR triumphantly proclaims that the British monarchy "gets it".
A.D. 1348: The ILOVEYOU virus kills over half the population of Europe. (The other half was not using Outlook.)
A.D. 1420: Johann Gutenberg invents the printing press. He is immediately sued by monks claiming that the technology will promote the copying of hand-transcribed books, thus violating the church's intellectual property.
A.D. 1429: Natalie Portman of Arc gathers an army of Slashdot trolls to do battle with the moderators. She is eventually tried as a heretic and stoned (as in petrified).
A.D. 1478: The Catholic Church partners with doubleclick.net to launch the Spanish Inquisition. A.D. 1492: Christopher Columbus arrives in what he believes to be "India", but which RMS informs him is actually "GNU/India".
A.D. 1508-12: Michaelengelo attempts to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling with ASCII art, only to have his plan thwarted by the "Lameness Filter."
A.D. 1517: Martin Luther nails his 95 Theses to the church door and is promptly moderated down to (-1, Flamebait).
A.D. 1553: "Bloody" Mary ascends the throne of England and begins an infamous crusade against Protestants. ESR eats his words.
A.D. 1588: The "IF I EVER MEET YOU, I WILL KICK YOUR ASS" guy meets the Spanish Armada.
A.D. 1603: Tokugawa Ieyasu unites the feuding pancake-eating ninjas of Japan.
A.D. 1611: Mattel adds Galileo Galilei to its CyberPatrol block list for proposing that the Earth revolves around the sun.
A.D. 1688: In the so-called "Glorious Revolution", King James II is bloodlessly forced out of power and flees to France. ESR again triumphantly proclaims that the British monarchy "gets it".
A.D. 1692: Anti-GIF hysteria in the New World comes to a head in the infamous "Salem GIF Trials", in which 20 alleged GIFs are burned at the stake. Later investigation reveals that mayn of the supposed GIFs were actually PNGs.
A.D. 1769: James Watt patents the one-click steam engine.
A.D. 1776: Trolls, angered by CmdrTaco's passage of the Moderation Act, rebel. After a several-year flame war, the trolls succeed in seceding from Slashdot and forming the United Coalition of Trolls.
A.D. 1789: The French Revolution begins with a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on the Bastille.
A.D. 1799: Attempts at discovering Egyptian hieroglyphs receive a major boost when Napoleon's troops discover the Rosetta stone. Sadly, the stone is quickly outlawed under the DMCA as an illegal means of circumventing encryption.
A.D. 1844: Samuel Morse invents Morse code. Cryptography export restrictions prevent the telegraph's use outside the U.S. and Canada.
A.D. 1853: United States Commodore Matthew C. Perry arrives in Japan and forces the xenophobic nation to open its doors to foreign trade. ESR triumphantly proclaims that Japan finally "gets it".
A.D. 1865: President Lincoln is 'bitchslapped.' The nation mourns.
A.D. 1901: Italian inventor Guglielmo Marcoli first demonstrates the radio. Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich immediately delivers to Marcoli a list of 335,435 suspected radio users.
A.D. 1911: Facing a break-up by the United States Supreme Court, Standard Oil Co. defends its "freedom to innovate" and proposes numerous rejected settlements. Slashbots mock the company as "Standa~1" and depict John D. Rockefeller as a member of the Borg.
A.D. 1929: V.A. Linux's stock drops over 200 dollars on "Black Tuesday", October 29th.
A.D. 1945: In the secret Manhattan Project, scientists working in Los Alamos, New Mexico, construct a nuclear bomb from Star Wars Legos.
A.D. 1948: Slashdot runs the infamous headline "DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN." Shamefaced, the site quickly retracts the story when numerous readers point out that it is not news for nerds, stuff that matters.
A.D. 1965: Jon Katz delivers his famous "I Have A Post-Hellmouth Dream" speech, which stated: "I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the geeks of former slaves and the geeks of former slave geeks will be able to sit down together at the table of geeks... I have a dream that my geek little geeks will one geek live in a nation where they will not be geeked by the geek of their geek but by the geek of their geek."
A.D. 1969: Neil Armstrong becomes the first man to set foot on the moon. His immortal words: "FIRST MOONWALK!!!"
A.D. 1970: Ohio National Guardsmen shoot four students at Kent State University for "Internet theft".
A.D. 1989: The United States invades Panama to capture renowned "hacker" Manual Noriega, who is suspected of writing the DeCSS utility.
A.D. 1990: West Germany and East Germany reunite after 45 years of separation. ESR triumphantly proclaims that Germany "gets it".
A.D. 1994: As years of apartheid rule finally end, Nelson Mandela is elected president of South Africa. ESR is sick, and sadly misses his chance to triumphantly proclaim that South Africa "gets it".
A.D. 1997: Slashdot reports that Scottish scientists have succeeded in cloning a female sheep named Dolly. Numerous readers complain that if they had wanted information on the latest sheep releases, they would have just gone to freshsheep.net
A.D. 1999: Miramax announces Don Knotts to play hacker Emmanuel Goldstein in upcoming movie "Takedown" [dorsai.org]
Yu Suzuki
About the author (Score:2)
"I'm not an expert on all the technical aspects involved in such an endeavor (Im no rocket scientist); nor do I have any idea of the cost involved, but I think I can reduce my plan into words here and let the engineers take it from there."
Qualifications anyone? could this be little more than an AC rant on Ham Radio?
___
Q: What's the first communications satellite??? (Score:5)
quick, what was the first communications satellite? Nope, not Echo. That's right, it was the moon! For many decades people have been doing moonbounces, or EME (Earth-Moon-Earth).
It's a pretty cool way to talk to someone on the other side of the world (albeit probably one of the least efficient). You can actually notice the delay from the return trip time for the radio signal to travel to the moon and back.
In fact, about a year ago, the ARRL just awarded two hams for doing the first single-yagi to single-yagi moonbounce. A typical EME involves an array of yagi antennas aimed at the moon. Lots and lots of wattage, so a small reflecting amount can hit a receiver sufficiently. In reflecting radio waves, the amount of received power varies inversely as R^4, so the moon being pretty far away makes this vastly difficult.
But that's what makes it all the more fun! (although i must confess, i've never done it, it's one of my goals when I get around to it)...
But seriously, a repeater on the moon is pretty cool, it'll still be a good challenge to key it successfully. Maybe it'll offer real-time pictures of earth for packet download too...
I'm glad FCC didn't agree with you (Score:2)
Take a look at the restructuring rule-making documnent. You'll find my name in attribution several places throughout the document.
There is no going back now.
Bruce
Paranoid Haiku (Score:2)
"ARTeMiS" is merely a
front operation
for the communist
conspiracy to launch nukes
and blow up the moon
as a response to
the U.S. moon-nuke program [slashdot.org].
(They're behind scedule.)
The truth is out there
but you refuse to believe.
(score, 0: flamebait)
Better lander technology (Score:3)
However, the cost of getting the repeater there is extremely high. It's cost AMSAT [amsat.org] a huge amount of money just to get Phase 3D into orbit, and it's not even up yet. Vibration testing, platforms costs, etc, etc, etc. So while I'm sure funding could be arrived at, I think it would actually be more difficult to raise the funds because of the perceived usefulness (Phase 3D promises usage with 5 watt handheld radios, versus steerable high gain antennas).
I wonder if using the Mars Lander airbag technique might not be a better method for safely delivering the payload to the lunar surface. While you certainly can't parachute it down, I wonder if something like a braking rocket with the payload suspended from it might work. Once some distance above the surface, the payload would be cut loose, the airbags inflated, and the device garanteed to arrive in a safe and upright condition (many people say that the Mars Lander landed softer than UPS handles most packages!)
-- Chris, K4JCW
Can the repeater be /.'ed? (Score:2)
Re:Lunar repeaters are a bad idea (Score:2)
I think you miss the whole point of the article.
While the practical aspects of the mission are daunting, and the technical payoff is less than stellar (no pun intended), the PR payoff is absolutely brilliant. The US went to the moon in 1969, and nobody's been there in 25 years. Certainly no private party has dared to go there. "Too expensive!" "No payoff!"
Even if a lunar repeater is impractical for the average ragchew, just to say that "a bunch of old fossils" had the vision and drive to put it there despite the naysayers is reason enough to go for it. And a Ham license becomes far more than access to a "dying medium". It becomes a ticket to the Moon!
Think about it.
Eric Lloyd, KC7ZDS
Re:Lunar repeaters are a bad idea (Score:2)
Just keep the amp powered -- all those tubes should do the trick just fine =)
hihi de N0RZT kChristopher A. Bohn
Re:Are you stupid? (Score:2)
1) no, I am not stupid
2) I am not ignorant of the truth of your lord. I just dispute it as The Truth.
3) I just learnt that stopping the earth wouldn't do any good. the earth doesn't even rotate. So god cannot stop the earth, since it is already stationary.
>Again your ignorance astounds me.
I live to please
>Jerusalem is the spiritual capital of the world,
Thank you for completely discounting the Tornado-theory
>and as such if the centre of the world in every way which counts.
depends on how you count. If your criterium is 'what place is a holy place for most religions' then you have a point.
//rdj
Re:I'm not a Ham radio enthusiast... (Score:2)
Uah.. (Score:2)
BTW - my favorite quote from a NASA representative: "this IS rocket science"
FluX
After 16 years, MTV has finally completed its deevolution into the shiny things network
Re:I am not the original poster, idiot (Score:2)
>But until you accept the love of the Lord into your heart and act to save the souls of your fellow men, you are still one of Satan's dupes, and as such destined for Hell.
hell, here I come!
Granted, you as a nameless, faceless entity are closer to a god than me.. a 'mere human'. I'd be happy to continue this discussion, but not with people calling me ignorant, idiot or asshole.
//rdj
Re:Better lander technology (Score:2)
Do just a little math, and you can figure these things out.
...phil
Re:almost (Score:2)
On the other hand, you might have a CBer who doesn't give a flying f*ck about the law, in which case you will have to call cops (or the FCC).
...phil
Re:I'm not a Ham radio enthusiast... (Score:2)
What's Ham Radio? (j/k) (Score:2)
Nice.