• [KB6NU] Amateur radio in the news: Connecting with strangers,

    From KB6NU via rec.radio.amateur.moderat@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 23 13:47:26 2021
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    KB6NU's Ham Radio Blog

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    Amateur radio in the news: Connecting with strangers,

    Posted: 23 May 2021 05:07 AM PDT http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu/tVpu/~3/t3D4pwE1i2o/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email

    Connecting with strangers over ham radio cleared my family’s static: Going analog boosted my marriage’s reception during a year of pandemic isolation.

    On a rainy October night during the pandemic, my husband, David, searches
    for a faint voice in the distance. He doesn’t know who’s calling, but he knows he wants to speak to them. David adjusts the tuning knob on the decades-old transceiver ever so slightly, as if cracking a safe. Outside, a homemade antenna bobs in the wind. On his computer, pulsating lines tell
    him the voice is one of hundreds calling out on this busy night. The voice
    gets clearer: “CQ,” the magic letters he’s been awaiting — the amateur radio operators’ invitation for a response — followed by a call sign. David jumps on his mic, repeating the stranger’s call sign and adds: “This is KB1TOY, Kilo-Bravo-1-Tango-Oscar-Yankee. You’re light but I can hear you!” read more

    ASU student-built spacecraft to interact with the public


      NASA has selected an Arizona State University-designed spacecraft to fly
    as an auxiliary payload aboard a rocket launching between 2022 and 2025. It
    is among 14 small research satellites, called CubeSats, that were chosen
    for this opportunity through NASA’s CubeSat Launch Initiative.

    The ASU CubeSat, named LightCube, is about the size of a toaster and will
    be deployed to low-Earth orbit (LEO). Its unique feature is that it can be commanded by anyone with an amateur radio license and a ham radio to set
    off a xenon flash from the spacecraft that will be visible from the ground.
    An artists rendition of the spacecraft LightCube in orbit. Credit: ASU/NASA read more

    HARA assists in placing flags on veterans’ graves

    On a beautiful Friday evening, several members of the Highland Amateur
    Radio Association gathered at Hillsboro’s rolling tree-covered cemetery to assist the cemetery board by placing flags on the graves of the 1,000
    veterans whom are buried there.


    The Club was joined by three other civic-minded organizations all wishing
    to honor those who served to protect our freedoms.

    According to cemetery board and HARA member John Willis, KE8JEM, the
    project was completed in a record less than one hour. HARA members will
    return to the cemetery after June 14’s Flag Day to assist removing the
    flags.
    read more

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