And they don't see that as a wide-open opportunity to get involved in it and leave their mark on it in a big way. Which is short-sighted of them, IMHO, but they do let their perception of the "ham radio culture" get in the way of the more fundamental thing, which is free spectrum to experiment with and find new ways to use. The trick is showing them how ham radio poses many of the same challenges they love to tackle on the cutting edge of other sorts of open-source systems, and (with a few exceptions in the seedier parts of some HF bands) the culture is a secondary concern at best ..
On Jul 17, 2008, at 6:38 AM, Ben Jackson wrote:
No, the technology available to youths today has become so pervasive that the majority of non-techies is using it. There are still the geeks and nerds sitting in the back room playing with technological toys, they just into Ham Radio. They think Ham Radio is a technological dead end and a just a bunch of old guys talking to each other about their medical problems. Sadly, for the most part, they're right.
"Almost nothing that trickles down is fit to consume." -- Davidson Loehr