PRC as a amplifier in GPS question.

Here is my 5 virtual dollars for you.

$5

Rudolf

"kam" <skhan_532@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:CXUhc.201513$Pk3.39451@pd7tw1no...
hey guys. i'm kam. i'm a computer science graduate and i own a
buisness. i am a virtiual assistant myself and i provide other
companies with virtual assistants. the reason for this post is
that i am searching for some virtual assistants to work from home.
it doesn't matter which part of the world you live in as long as
you own a computer and are willing to work from home and willing
to earn some extra cash. i'm sharing this information with you
because when i forward virtual assistants to other companies then
i get paid for it. and you are reading this post because you get
paid by the company i refer you to for working for them through the
Internet. Intenet is a powerful tool and if used properly we can
all gain a lot of benefit from it. all you have to pay me is $5
for referring you to the other companies. that's it. if you have
any doubts then you can email me and i will let you know further
how true this is and i am a real person who can help you gain some
extra cash. all it is going to take is $5 which will put you on my
list of virtual assistants and then i will find you an employer
and for my services i am charging $5 only. and there are many
employers in need of virtual assistants currently. if you are
interested in what i have to offer then please follow the STEPS
and i will get in touch with you through email or ICQ as soon as
i get your email.

what is a virtual assistant?
basically a virtual assistant is a secretary providing his/her
services. you do all the jobs of a secretary but from your home.
you may be asked to fax documents to various people or write emails
to various people or respond to emails sent to you from other
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hour.


STEPS
1) register yourself with ICQ and install ICQ on your computer.
add me to your ICQ list also. my ICQ number is: 234465436
www.icq.com
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3) send $5 through your PayPal account to this PayPal
account: kshawl@shaw.ca
4) send me an email at skhan_532@hotmail.com with your name
and your PayPal account email address

alright. once a payment is recieved from your PayPal account
then i will assign you to a company and be able to help you better.
that's it.
this is no bullshit. this is not a get rich fast scheme. you will
be paid for the amount of time you work and you will be paid
hourly.

ANY QUESTIONS? email me at: skhan_532@hotmail.com
 
"Jock" <afton370@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:drif801bg3su087sgf6ahn6vs9b96nvao9@4ax.com...
On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 06:37:52 +0800, "Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au
wrote:

The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?

--

Jock. Class A+++
Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.

Marty
 
I'm virtually certain to give mine. Later.

Ken

"Rudolf Ladyzhenskii" <rudolfl@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
news:4088d590$0$4548$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.au...
Here is my 5 virtual dollars for you.

$5

Rudolf

"kam" <skhan_532@hotmail.com> spewed forth in message
news:CXUhc.201513$Pk3.39451@pd7tw1no...
hey guys. i'm kam. i'm a computer science graduate and i own a
 
In message <4088e109$0$27651$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au>, Marty
Wallace <mart@geo.net.au> writes
"Jock" <afton370@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:drif801bg3su087sgf6ahn6vs9b96nvao9@4ax.com...
On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 06:37:52 +0800, "Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au
wrote:

The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?

--

Jock. Class A+++

Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.

Marty
Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.

And yes, I am also sure
Trev
--
Trevor Day
 
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?

--

Jock. Class A+++

Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.

Marty

Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.

And yes, I am also sure
Trev
--
Trevor Day
In what way is it used?

Marty
 
Off and on?

"Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au> wrote in message
news:40890f15$0$27642$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au...
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.
Are you absolutely sure of that?
Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.
Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.
And yes, I am also sure
In what way is it used?
 
"Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au> wrote in message
news:40890f15$0$27642$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au...
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
It's used with aeronautical beacons in some areas



--
AK47 Al -Qaeda C4 Bush Queen London Bomb Gareth Evans G4SDW Plot MI5
Detonator GCHQ Listen Bug Anthrax

Not a member of the Chippen Ham fan club.
 
In message <40890f15$0$27642$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au>, Marty
Wallace <mart@geo.net.au> writes
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?

--

Jock. Class A+++

Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.

Marty

Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.

And yes, I am also sure
Trev
--
Trevor Day

In what way is it used?

Marty
Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
The ability to intercept third world military comms is also desirable!

Trev


--
Trevor Day
 
"Geoff" <geoff@nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote in message
news:Xns94D4BD1921CABgeoffmailnews@158.152.254.254...
Trevor Day <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com> wrote in
news:YRlJhkFaiSiAFwJp@secornwall.com:


Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
The ability to intercept third world military comms is also
desirable!

To be fair to Marty, I think light signalling is a little out of context.

In radio useage, NDBs and similar are disappearing so fast as to make you
think that they must cost money to maintain. I played with my RDF a couple
of weeks back, the first time in about five years, I could hear only one
beacon, and that was an aircraft NDB at that.

Of course, racons still identify in morse, at 9.5GHz!

YG
That's pretty much the point I was trying to make.
In the old days if you crashed a plane and cobbled together some sort of
radio and got out a morse signal there was a possibility that an official
organisation might hear you. With emergency beacons that send a signal to an
overhead satelite and mobile phones available to everyone, nobody except
amateur radio people are listening.
Learning morse these days is largely an academic exercise, a bit like
learning Latin. Ok, maybe you'll get to talk to the pope one day but the
reality is that every one has moved on.

Marty
 
Marty Wallace wrote:

Learning morse these days is largely an academic exercise, a bit like
learning Latin. Ok, maybe you'll get to talk to the pope one day but the
reality is that every one has moved on.
That will come as a surpise to the NSA.

--
John Miller
Email address: domain, n4vu.com; username, jsm

Grinnell's Law of Labor Laxity:
At all times, for any task, you have not got enough done today.
 
"Trevor Day" <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com> wrote in message news:YRlJhkFaiSiAFwJp@secornwall.com...
In message <40890f15$0$27642$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au>, Marty
Wallace <mart@geo.net.au> writes
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?

--

Jock. Class A+++

Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.

Marty

Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.

And yes, I am also sure
Trev
--
Trevor Day

In what way is it used?

Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
Dunno, surely that should be easy enough to capture from a satellite.

The ability to intercept third world military comms is also desirable!
I doubt any third world military comms uses that much anymore.
 
"Geoff" <geoff@nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote in message news:Xns94D4BD1921CABgeoffmailnews@158.152.254.254...
Trevor Day <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com> wrote in
news:YRlJhkFaiSiAFwJp@secornwall.com:


Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
The ability to intercept third world military comms is also
desirable!

To be fair to Marty, I think light signalling is a little out of context.

In radio useage, NDBs and similar are disappearing so fast as to make you
think that they must cost money to maintain. I played with my RDF a couple
of weeks back, the first time in about five years, I could hear only one
beacon, and that was an aircraft NDB at that.
And NDBs have never required the users to be fluent with morse
anyway. They use morse so slowly that the morse is just printed
on the paperwork that lists the NDB details and anyone with a
clue can use that to make sure the correct NDB is being used.

> Of course, racons still identify in morse, at 9.5GHz!
 
Trevor Day <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com> wrote in
news:YRlJhkFaiSiAFwJp@secornwall.com:


Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
The ability to intercept third world military comms is also
desirable!
To be fair to Marty, I think light signalling is a little out of context.

In radio useage, NDBs and similar are disappearing so fast as to make you
think that they must cost money to maintain. I played with my RDF a couple
of weeks back, the first time in about five years, I could hear only one
beacon, and that was an aircraft NDB at that.

Of course, racons still identify in morse, at 9.5GHz!

YG
 
On Fri, 23 Apr 2004 20:51:48 +0800, "Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au>
wrote:

In what way is it used?
just goes to show you how much you DO know.


Aircraft nav beacons
Aircraft can decode the morse now and display the ident on the screen.

many voice repeaters in the USA use it for ident.
 
On Sat, 24 Apr 2004 05:34:17 +1000, "Rod Speed" <rod_speed@yahoo.com>
wrote:


*** Caution: this posting contains a four letter word
that some may find disressing.


And NDBs have never required the users to be fluent with morse
anyway.
many C.A.A's requires CPLs to have passed
a SIX ( YES SIX) wpm TEST (yes *TEST*)

They use morse so slowly that the morse is just printed
on the paperwork that lists the NDB details and anyone with a
clue can use that to make sure the correct NDB is being used.
its printed for those PPL who dont know morse code.

BECAUSE SAFETY COMES FIRST
 
On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 21:09:50 +0000, Jock <afton370@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 19:10:12 +0100, "Laurie" <laurie_h@despammed.com> wrote:

Marty Wallace wrote:
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now

That may well come as a surprise to the users of aeronautical beacons.

... and to Russian, Ukranian, Indonesian and some other military
users, along with the Israeli Navy, Italian coast stations and
numerous "numbers" stations.
ahh here!

now youre just being factual.

whats have facts got to do with morse code ?
 
On Fri, 23 Apr 2004 20:51:48 +0800, "Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au> wrote:

The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all now
except
in "HAM" radio license tests.

Are you absolutely sure of that?


Yes I am.
No longer used in any official capacity since Feb 1st 1999.
No longer used in any official capacity by whom?

Morse is still used by the military (Navy), and remains part of the
communications branch syllabus.

And yes, I am also sure

In what way is it used?
I doubt that the _Royal_ Navy uses it any more, but certainly other
navies do.

--

Jock. Class A+++
 
On Fri, 23 Apr 2004 15:30:50 +0100, Trevor Day <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com>
wrote:

In what way is it used?

Marty

Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
Possibly.

The ability to intercept third world military comms is also desirable!
Are you absolutely sure that's done by the navy?

--

Jock. Class A+++
 
"huLLy" <hully@despammed.com> wrote in message
news:c6b7p6$a2juq$1@ID-92818.news.uni-berlin.de...
"Marty Wallace" <mart@geo.net.au> wrote in message
news:40890f15$0$27642$61ce578d@news.syd.swiftdsl.com.au...
The really stupid thing is that morse isn't used anywhere at all
now

It's used with aeronautical beacons in some areas



--
AK47 Al -Qaeda C4 Bush Queen London Bomb Gareth Evans G4SDW Plot MI5
Detonator GCHQ Listen Bug Anthrax

Not a member of the Chippen Ham fan club.
Most certainly is too.. SWN beacon from Swansea "airport" on Fairwood Common
still sending.

Paul MW0CDO
 
On Fri, 23 Apr 2004 17:35:18 +0000 (UTC), Geoff <geoff@nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote:

Trevor Day <Trev@secornwall.removethis.com> wrote in
news:YRlJhkFaiSiAFwJp@secornwall.com:


Generally by flashing light. Ranges to the horizon and very secure.
The ability to intercept third world military comms is also
desirable!

To be fair to Marty, I think light signalling is a little out of context.

In radio useage, NDBs and similar are disappearing so fast as to make you
think that they must cost money to maintain. I played with my RDF a couple
of weeks back, the first time in about five years, I could hear only one
beacon, and that was an aircraft NDB at that.
Must have been a pretty awful DF setup. There are hundreds of
aeronautical radio navigational beacons right across the world
identifying themselves in Morse.

With a MW loop and a reasonable receiver I can log hundreds.

Of course, racons still identify in morse, at 9.5GHz!
You jest!

--

Jock. Class A+++
 

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