At 02:06 AM 7/8/2009, Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF wrote:
No we don't. The FCC are obviously happy to allow us to do what we do now.
I agree. I believe it's counterproductive going off and making noise to the relevant Government authority (FCC, Ofcom, ACMA, Industry Canada, etc). The rules are there for a reason, but the rules can't keep pace with the level of technological change and innovation. WHat we do need to focus on is operating within the _spirit_ of the rules. Sending a page to establish a QSO is another means of selective calling, and that's already available on other modes (e.g. callsign squelch on D-STAR). In fact, a very clever gateway might be able to route a D-STAR call to a pager, and alert the recipient that someone on D-STAR is looking to make contact.
If you stir up trouble and get things banned, there are going to be an awful lot of pissed amameurs after your arse.
Agree. Nothing worse than the nit pickers getting something banned, because they made noises, rather than letting events develop. Now, if the pages were being used for commercial reasons, fair enough, but that's already covered in the rules, no further action needs to be taken. POCSAG is a readily available protocol, so no problem there, and the majority of pages are going to be to initiate a QSO.
73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL http://vkradio.com