• Re: Wannabe HAM

    From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Jimmy Anderson on Sat Sep 17 09:21:00 2016
    In a message on Saturday 09-16-16 Jimmy Anderson said to Mark Lewis:

    mark lewis wrote to JIMMY ANDERSON <=-

    you should ask them how they're gonna talk to anyone at a distance
    after a natural disaster shuts down the cell networks... for that
    matter, ask those with VoIP phones how they're gonna call their ISP to report problems or outtage when their network connection isn't working
    ;) ;) ;)

    There's a guy semi-local that wants to get Winlink set up.
    Just sending email would be a boon in a time like that! Then of

    Do you expect Winlink to work when all the cellphone nets and ISP's go
    down? I wouldn't.

    course BBS's have small enough data footprints that you COULD work
    them at 9600 baud if you needed to...

    Yes, as long as you still have a POTS line and a modem in your computer.


    CU L8ER, Sam, OH0NC

    Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * Aland Islands / 60 degrees North / 20 degrees East


    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Holger Granholm on Sun Sep 18 22:01:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Jimmy Anderson <=-

    Do you expect Winlink to work when all the cellphone nets and ISP's go down? I wouldn't.

    Peer-peer mode will work.


    ... Now there's a beetle in my soup. Sorry, sir, we're out of flies today.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From JIMMY ANDERSON@1:116/18 to HOLGER GRANHOLM on Sun Sep 18 10:14:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Jimmy Anderson <=-

    There's a guy semi-local that wants to get Winlink set up.
    Just sending email would be a boon in a time like that! Then of

    Do you expect Winlink to work when all the cellphone nets and ISP's go down? I wouldn't.

    Well, if the LOCAL cell net is down but HAM is up you could at least
    use Winlink to get a message out from the local area to a place where
    it was working. Or am I not understanding it correctly? I thought he
    would link some Winlink repeaters so it's ALL HAM traffic.

    course BBS's have small enough data footprints that you COULD work
    them at 9600 baud if you needed to...

    Yes, as long as you still have a POTS line and a modem in your
    computer.

    I meant the Winlink operates at 9600.


    ... I AM IMMORTAL! Well, so far anyway...
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Neptune's Lair - Olive Branch MS - winserver.org:1974 (1:116/18)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to JIMMY ANDERSON on Mon Sep 19 08:09:00 2016
    JIMMY ANDERSON wrote to HOLGER GRANHOLM <=-

    Well, if the LOCAL cell net is down but HAM is up you could at least
    use Winlink to get a message out from the local area to a place where
    it was working. Or am I not understanding it correctly? I thought he
    would link some Winlink repeaters so it's ALL HAM traffic.

    Peer-peer will work, and there is also a RF forwarding option for when the Internet fails at the RMS.

    I meant the Winlink operates at 9600.

    Out here, HF is the only option. No Winlink within VHF range, though I am likely to set something up myself.


    ... I know the voices aren't real but they have good ideas.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Jimmy Anderson on Mon Sep 19 09:47:00 2016
    In a message on Monday 09-18-16 Jimmy Anderson said to Holger Granholm:

    Hello Jimmy,

    Do you expect Winlink to work when all the cellphone nets and ISP's
    go down? I wouldn't.

    Well, if the LOCAL cell net is down but HAM is up you could at least
    use Winlink to get a message out from the local area to a place
    where it was working. Or am I not understanding it correctly? I
    thought he would link some Winlink repeaters so it's ALL HAM
    traffic.

    If the cell net goes down, so does the ISP's. In a disaster, usually all providers, be they cell- or inter-net, go down.

    A ham repeater may work some time, if it has a battery back-up, but once
    that is depleted, it will also go down.

    Still, without an Internet Service Provider (ISP), to connect to, even
    Winlink is dead.

    course BBS's have small enough data footprints that you COULD work
    them at 9600 baud if you needed to...

    Yes, as long as you still have a POTS line and a modem in your
    computer.

    I meant the Winlink operates at 9600.

    Against what, when the providers are down ??


    Have a nice day,

    Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * 100,000 sperm and YOU were the fastest? YEEES, I was!


    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Tony Langdon on Mon Sep 19 09:47:00 2016
    In a message on Monday 09-18-16 Tony Langdon said to Holger Granholm:

    GE Tony,

    Do you expect Winlink to work when all the cellphone nets and ISP's go down? I wouldn't.

    Peer-peer mode will work.

    The only peer-to-peer networking I know, is within a wire or wireless
    network, usually within a building.

    Going outside of that, usually requires the step-in of an ISP.

    One thing I forgot in my message to Jimmy, was that many areas are interconnected by wires/cables, supported by poles. They are very
    susceptible to damage in an ice storm or a cyclone (typhoon).

    Here, all power grid and phone lines (POTS), are underground, and the
    phone companies have very capable battery support, and own generators,
    should the power grid be interrupted for a long time.

    Also, at least in the city and partly on the countryside, also the ISP glassfibre cables are underground..

    Even the local power company does have several gas-turbine, and one big
    diesel power plant to throw in, if the feeds from Sweden or Finland
    should fail.


    GN es 73 de Sam, OH0NC

    aka Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * What are you looking down here for? Read the message.

    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From JIMMY ANDERSON@1:116/18 to HOLGER GRANHOLM on Tue Sep 20 08:42:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Jimmy Anderson <=-

    If the cell net goes down, so does the ISP's. In a disaster, usually
    all providers, be they cell- or inter-net, go down.

    Okay - let me back up a step...

    We live near a major fault line. I have people around me that don't use
    HAM and have family far off. If a disaster hit and they needed to get communication to their family in Chicago, they wouldn't be able to.

    I, as a HAM, could theoretically get a message out, but it would be
    verbal and passed through others. With Winlink linked via radio,
    an email could leave my laptop, go through the HAM, through the radio
    network to a place that DOES have Internet service, then be delivered
    to their family in Chicago.

    Again, in theory. :-)


    ... U.S. Mint workers on strike-they want to make less money.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Neptune's Lair - Olive Branch MS - winserver.org:1974 (1:116/18)
  • From Mike Luther@1:117/100 to Holger Granholm on Tue Sep 20 08:21:10 2016
    Yes you and I do know a bit about being bit by pulse!


    If the cell net goes down, so does the ISP's. In a disaster, usually all providers, be they cell- or inter-net, go down.

    A ham repeater may work some time, if it has a battery back-up, but once that is depleted, it will also go down.

    Still, without an Internet Service Provider (ISP), to connect to, even Winlink is dead.

    course BBS's have small enough data footprints that you COULD work
    them at 9600 baud if you needed to...

    Yes, as long as you still have a POTS line and a modem in your
    computer.

    I meant the Winlink operates at 9600.

    Against what, when the providers are down ??


    Have a nice day,

    Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * 100,000 sperm and YOU were the fastest? YEEES, I was!


    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)

    Yes 'they' are talking about EMP pulse and humans whoping humans with nasty radiation dis and dat.. But in what we both know isn't 'human' sourced from the solar flares, they can be FAR WORSE for us all. I think we both know about
    the Carrington Event back when there was only telegraph lines for data dis and dat. Monster solar flare event that burned up all the telegraph railroad lines
    and so on and killed a pile full of poor humans that were sending Morse Code at
    the time!

    Well folks here do need to do the research if they have not already. These massive solar flares do occur over and over again every say a bit less than 200
    years or so. Every day I look at the website www.spaceweather.com as it and some others as well monitor all this stuff all the time. As best I also understand, likely some time between now and the end of this year or next year our whole galaxy and is going through a complete reversal of the magnetic polarity of the whole universe. The jigger is already very evident if you are watching things. In the last nearly three years the magnetic polarity of our Earth has already moved over 120 miles! The current North Pole is just at the north tip of Russia. The current South Pole is at the tip of Brazil. Do the research. The internal magna of our Earth is now jiggling at time over 400 miles a night back and forth! AHA! Now you know why all the earthquakes are roaring off in the Ring Of Fire and all the volcano eruptions and so on are ramping up everywhere. Plus the ocean monster wave eruptions and so on.

    Look up the effects of the old volcano Krakatoa back in the late 1800's on Google. When it blew up it tossed ashes and so on that were all over the Earth's atmosphere for more than a year! Cough, cough humanity... But did you
    know that the Yellowstone volcano is about ten times the size of that mess of Krakatoa? Plus that the earthquakes under it have already split the earth so that it can easily erupt in any jiggle?

    OK hams. If all the whole wired and IT operations plus the cloud vanish in a few seconds or so for us all, who do we have to even help us save all of what we can for us all? Well if protected from the EMP surge by a simple shielding of our ham shack stuff and even battery powered, us ham radio folks might be the best way, with underground wire power lines and phone lines plus fiber optic cable, to save all humanity.

    No, I don't know exactly the time for what has been carefully predicted for a long time. But even after I put together the original EOC for all of the Texas
    A&M College area back decades ago so that we could even work with Morse Code to
    Australia if we were whopped with an ABomb from Russia, and ahve the thank you letter from the ARRL, this is why it is so important for all you folks here to look upward and pray. I even proved that one watt of RF Morse Code could work Perth Australia from W5WQN at the right time on 40CW one day from my little boy
    ham shack here where this message is still being typed.

    Mike Luther as W5WQN as NC117 at 1:117/100


    ---
    * Origin: BV HUB CLL(979)696-3600 (1:117/100)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Holger Granholm on Wed Sep 21 08:09:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Peer-peer mode will work.

    The only peer-to-peer networking I know, is within a wire or wireless network, usually within a building.

    I was talking about peer - peer mode in Winlink software such as RMS Express. That works as far as you can get on HF. :)


    ... "Aw, mom, you act like I'm not even wearing a bungee cord!"
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to JIMMY ANDERSON on Wed Sep 21 08:54:00 2016
    JIMMY ANDERSON wrote to HOLGER GRANHOLM <=-

    I, as a HAM, could theoretically get a message out, but it would be
    verbal and passed through others. With Winlink linked via radio,
    an email could leave my laptop, go through the HAM, through the radio network to a place that DOES have Internet service, then be delivered
    to their family in Chicago.

    Again, in theory. :-)

    Winlink has features that a lot of hams don't seem to know about.

    1. Peer-peer mode - this allows the passing of messages directly between stations with no Internet use at all. Most useful for a wide area EMCOMM net or point to point link between two stations handling traffic for a large scale emergency.

    2. RF forwarding. There is a newer mode in RMS Express where if the RMS mailbox (the place you normally exchange Winlink mail with) loses Internet connectivity, you can instruct it to forward email via RF to a more distant RMS which does have Internet.


    ... We put the "k" in "kwality."
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From JIMMY ANDERSON@1:116/18 to TONY LANGDON on Wed Sep 21 10:46:00 2016
    Tony Langdon wrote to JIMMY ANDERSON <=-

    2. RF forwarding. There is a newer mode in RMS Express where if the
    RMS mailbox (the place you normally exchange Winlink mail with) loses Internet connectivity, you can instruct it to forward email via RF to a more distant RMS which does have Internet.

    Right - this - this is what I was talking about. :-)


    ... A lesbian is just another case of a woman attempting to do a man's job.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Neptune's Lair - Olive Branch MS - winserver.org:1974 (1:116/18)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to JIMMY ANDERSON on Thu Sep 22 07:51:00 2016
    JIMMY ANDERSON wrote to TONY LANGDON <=-

    @MSGID: <57E2C2AA.594.fido-amateurr@freeway.apana.org.au>
    @TZ: 412c
    Tony Langdon wrote to JIMMY ANDERSON <=-

    2. RF forwarding. There is a newer mode in RMS Express where if the
    RMS mailbox (the place you normally exchange Winlink mail with) loses Internet connectivity, you can instruct it to forward email via RF to a more distant RMS which does have Internet.

    Right - this - this is what I was talking about. :-)

    Yes, so Winlink has ways to work around Internet outages over very wide areas. :) Of course, you can simply try to link to a more distant Winlink gateway RMS directly. My longest successful link has been over 3000 km to Darwin.


    ... Nothing is foolproof. Fools are too ingenious.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Jimmy Anderson on Wed Sep 21 09:28:00 2016
    In a message on Wednesday 09-20-16 Jimmy Anderson said to Holger
    Granholm:

    Good morning Jimmy,

    If the cell net goes down, so does the ISP's. In a disaster, usually
    all providers, be they cell- or inter-net, go down.

    Okay - let me back up a step...

    OK first, please tell me what you put into the expression "HAM" that you
    use so frequently.

    To us radio amateurs, that 'shorthand' just means 'a radio amateur',
    not any network or relay or something else.

    We live near a major fault line. I have people around me that don't
    use HAM and have family far off. If a disaster hit and they needed
    to get communication to their family in Chicago, they wouldn't be
    able to.

    'Use HAM', what is that??

    With Winlink linked via radio, an email could leave my laptop, go
    through the HAM, through the radio network to a place that DOES have Internet service, then be delivered to their family in Chicago.

    How could you send an e-mail if the cell- and internet providers are
    down.

    And again, what does 'through the HAM' mean?

    Again, in theory. :-)

    Yes theory is nice, but it doesn't always work.


    Have a nice day,

    Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * File not found: Loading something that looked similar.

    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Tony Langdon on Wed Sep 21 09:28:00 2016
    In a message on Wednesday 09-21-16 Tony Langdon said to Holger Granholm:

    Hi Tony,

    Peer-peer mode will work.

    The only peer-to-peer networking I know, is within a wire or wireless network, usually within a building.

    I was talking about peer - peer mode in Winlink software such as RMS Express. That works as far as you can get on HF. :)

    OK, tnx fer the info.


    CU L8ER, Sam, OH0NC

    aka Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * WEDDING DRESS FOR SALE. Worn once by mistake. Call Stephanie.

    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Holger Granholm on Thu Sep 22 19:49:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    I was talking about peer - peer mode in Winlink software such as RMS Express. That works as far as you can get on HF. :)

    OK, tnx fer the info.

    No probs. Winlink has a few tricks to cope with varying levels of Internet outage. :)


    ... If a circuit cannot fail, it will.
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Holger Granholm@2:20/228 to Mike Luther on Thu Sep 22 21:48:00 2016
    In a message on Thursday 09-20-16 Mike Luther said to Holger Granholm:

    GM Mike,

    I meant the Winlink operates at 9600.

    Against what, when the providers are down ??

    Yes 'they' are talking about EMP pulse and humans whoping humans
    with nasty radiation dis and dat.. But in what we both know isn't
    'human' sourced from the solar flares, they can be FAR WORSE for us

    I was talking about ANY disasters, like ice storms, cyclones or anything
    that takes down communications.

    I think we both know about the Carrington Event back when
    there was only telegraph lines for data dis and dat. Monster solar
    flare event that burned up all the telegraph railroad lines and so
    on and killed a pile full of poor humans that were sending Morse
    Code at the time!

    Yes, we do remember that, and it can still happen, even though many
    safety measures have been implemented. In the case of an EMP pulse, most
    of todays semiconductor appliances will go up in smoke.

    Remember: Electronics work with smoke. If the smoke gets out, equipmment
    will stop working.

    What may be left, are the old appliances, as radio sets with tubes.

    These massive solar flares do occur over and over again every say a
    bit less than 200 years or so. Every day I look at the website www.spaceweather.com as it and some others as well monitor all this

    So do I, and I have researced solar cycles from 1600 until today.
    That includes the Maunder minimum 1645-1715, and the Dalton minimum
    1790-1830, and compared the smoothed sunspot numbers (SSN) for the
    period. That includes the Schwabe 11 years, Hale 22 years, and Gleissberg
    44 years cycles, as well as the 200 year cycle.

    They all point to a renewed new very deep minimum, as does this report published in the german ham radio magazine CQ DL 7/2016:
    _____________________

    Clip from the german Deutsche Amateurfunk Magazin, CQ DL 7/2016,
    UKW-Rundschau, p. 52

    "What are the expectations for the coming years? Does the Professor of
    Physics Harald Lesch, known from german TV, prove to be right, there
    will not in the next four to six decades be anymore sunspot maxima.
    The 'Small ice age' of the 1800s, the Dalton Minimum, will be repeated.
    It may have had other causes *), but the fact remains, that our grand-
    or maybe grandgrand children will not be able to fully utilize the bands
    above 14 MHz. That would above all be tragic for the 6m band."

    Translation by Holger "Sam" Granholm, OH0NC

    *) Added by the translator: The trend of the past sunspot cycles show
    the same behaviour as the cycles preceeding the "Small ice age". _____________________

    I'm old enough to probably not be around when that happens, but I have
    warned all my relatives, and many others of the impending disaster.
    Mostly I have been met with disbelief, and thoughts of a crazy oldie ;o)

    stuff all the time. As best I also understand, likely some time
    between now and the end of this year or next year our whole galaxy
    and is going through a complete reversal of the magnetic polarity of

    Right now the sun changes its polarity regularly, so a complete reversal
    may happen any time.

    ................ In the last nearly three years the magnetic
    polarity of our Earth has already moved over 120 miles! The current
    North Pole is just at the north tip of Russia. The current South
    Pole is at the tip of Brazil. Do the research.

    This is a regular shift of the magnetic polarity that all navigators are
    taught in all schools for seamen, airline and sea pilots and others that have/want to know how to navigate. I have passed such an examination.

    of our Earth is now jiggling at time over 400 miles a night back and
    forth! AHA! Now you know why all the earthquakes are roaring off
    in the Ring Of Fire and all the volcano eruptions and so on are
    ramping up everywhere. Plus the ocean monster wave eruptions and so
    on.

    Earthquakes and volcano eruptions are the result of the earth crust
    moving at the cracks, that were created when the crust split into the
    different continents, we have today.

    Look up the effects of the old volcano Krakatoa back in the late
    1800's on Google. When it blew up it tossed ashes and so on that
    were all over the Earth's atmosphere for more than a year!

    We have a much younger volcano eruption to recall, the one at Iceland.
    It certainly didn't have the strength of Krakatoa, but it tossed up
    enough ashes, to have the intercontinental airlines to find new routes.

    OK hams. If all the whole wired and IT operations plus the cloud
    vanish in a few seconds or so for us all, who do we have to even
    help us save all of what we can for us all? Well if protected from
    the EMP surge by a simple shielding of our ham shack stuff and even
    battery powered, us ham radio folks might be the best way, with
    underground wire power lines and phone lines plus fiber optic cable,
    to save all humanity.

    Well, I haven't shielded my ham shack, but all my equipment is battery
    powered, both HF, VHF, UHF and SHF. I'm also trying to get back the
    Drake TR-4 that I once owned. I still have the mobile power supply and
    the RV-4 remote VFO.

    The TR-7 that sits on my desk, probably won't stand an EMP attack, but
    chances are that the TR-4 may survive.

    The power and phone companies have done what they can, to protect us by
    burying all lines, so we don't have that spider web seen in other places

    No, I don't know exactly the time for what has been carefully
    predicted for a long time.

    We can just pray that it won't happen while we are alive.

    TNX fer ur msg

    73 es GL de Sam OH0NC SK

    aka Holger

    ___
    * MR/2 2.30 * OLD HAMs built their own gear and used Morse!


    --- PCBoard (R) v15.22 (OS/2) 2
    * Origin: Coming to you from the Sunny Aland Islands. (2:20/228)
  • From JIMMY ANDERSON@1:116/18 to HOLGER GRANHOLM on Fri Sep 23 12:51:00 2016
    Holger Granholm wrote to Jimmy Anderson <=-

    OK first, please tell me what you put into the expression "HAM" that
    you use so frequently.

    Amatuer Radio - be it the user, the equipment, whatever.

    We live near a major fault line. I have people around me that don't
    use HAM and have family far off. If a disaster hit and they needed
    to get communication to their family in Chicago, they wouldn't be
    able to.

    'Use HAM', what is that??

    Use a amateur radio - that better?

    With Winlink linked via radio, an email could leave my laptop, go
    through the HAM, through the radio network to a place that DOES have Internet service, then be delivered to their family in Chicago.

    How could you send an e-mail if the cell- and internet providers are
    down.

    I can create an email server on a laptop. The routing would not be
    automatic, but it could be done.

    And again, what does 'through the HAM' mean?

    Via the radio waves that amatuer operators use.

    Again, in theory. :-)

    Yes theory is nice, but it doesn't always work.

    Nope - but it NEVER works if you don't even attempt it.


    ... Direct from the Ministry of Silly Walks
    --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    * Origin: Neptune's Lair - Olive Branch MS - winserver.org:1974 (1:116/18)