Hello there,
I am having some difficulty. Are there any amateurs consistently
receiving 9600 beacons or TLM from either POSAT, ECHO or TECHSAT? It has
been some time since I heard anything from these. Thanks.
Jim
N6FO
San Francisco
ISS Commander McArthur to Keynote at AMSAT Symposium
AMSAT is excited to announce that ISS Expedition 12 Commander William
(Bill) S. McArthur, KC5ACR, will be the keynote speaker at the 2006
AMSAT Space Symposium to be held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Foster
City, California, October 6-8, 2006. Commander McArthur is well
known to ham radio operators - during his six months aboard the ISS
he became the most active radio amateur ever to serve in space.
Commander McArthur logged more than 1800 QSOs, and earned the ARRL
Worked All States Award. His impressive track record also included a
record 37 school contacts, Worked All Continents (including
Antartica) and 130 DXCC entities.
Astronaut McArthur is a veteran of four space flights that include:
* STS-58 - October 1993 (Spacelab Life Sciences Mission 2)
* STS-74 - November 1995 (Shuttle-Mir Docking Missing 2)
* STS-92 - October 2000 (ISS Assembly Mission 3A)
* Expedition 12 - October 2005
In addition Bill has made four spacewalks (two each aboard STS-92 and
Expedition 12) and was on backup crews of Expeditions 8, 9 and
10. He will be featured during the Annual Banquet on Saturday
evening, October 7, 2006.
The 2006 Space Symposium will be a joint meeting with the ARISS
International Delegates and will also include the IARU Satellite
Advisory Panel annual meeting, and a meeting of AMSAT International
Delegates. For additional information please visit the AMSAT
website at http://www.amsat.org. Click on the 2006 Space Symposium
link in the left side menu.
This year you can register for the Space Symposium online. Online
Registration can be found at http://www.amsat-na.com/symposium
73,
Emily Clarke, N1DID
Symposium Chair
The mailing lists at amsat.org have been converted over to a new
program. Instead of Majordomo, we are now using GNU Mailman.
Everybody's subscription was transferred over automatically, so you
don't have to take any action to continue to receive your current
mailing lists.
The big difference is that subscribing and unsubscribing is now done
on the web instead of by sending email. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or
change any of a number of new options for email delivery, start on
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo and select the mailing list of
interest. From there, the forms are intended to be self-explanatory.
You can also get to the forms using the web link at the bottom of
every message from the mailing list.
One thing has not changed: if you need help from a human, send email
to listmaint(a)amsat.org. Don't send any requests for help,
subscribe/unsubscribe requests, or test messages to the mailing lists.
Daily digests are handled a bit differently in Mailman. Instead of
separate mailing lists (for example, amsat-bb for individual messages
and amsat-bb-digest for the digest), there is a single mailing list
(amsat-bb) and each user can set various options, including digest
mode. Subscribers to digest mailing lists were transferred to the
single mailing list, with the digest option enabled. If you're one of
the few subscribers who were getting both individual messages and the
digest for the same list, that is no longer possible.
More on AMSAT's mailing list services at
http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/tools/maillist/maillist.php or click
on Mail Services on AMSAT's main web page.
I hope the transition will be smooth for everybody. If you notice any
problems or have any questions, send mail to listmaint(a)amsat.org.
73 -Paul
kb5mu(a)amsat.org
Director, Electronic Communications
Just out of curiosity, how often are "supposedly dead" satellites listened
for? I was wondering if any effort is
applied to checking if past dead satellites have "come back from the dead"
like AO-7 did a few years ago.
Thanks,
RoD
KD0XX