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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2384 for Friday July 7th, 2023
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Sent: 230707/0803 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.2.061  $:70325PY2BIL
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Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2384 for Friday July 7th, 2023

Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2384 with a release date of Friday July 
7th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. Gains in attendance at Europe's largest hamfest. Sri 
Lanka loses a respected member of the amateur community -- and there are big 
plans ahead for radio at Scout camps.  All this and more as Amateur Radio 
Newsline Report Number 2384 comes your way right now.

**
BILLBOARD CART

**
GAIN IN ATTENDANCE AT HAM RADIO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Germany. With Ham Radio 
Friedrichshafen (Pron: Freed Ricks Harfen) completing two weeks ago, the 
attendance figures have been announced and there's some good news. Over to 
our European Correspondent  Ed Durrant DD5LP who attended.

ED: This year's attendance at Ham Radio, Europe's largest Hamfest, was up by 
10% to 11,100 and the number of traders by 15% compared to last year, 
despite predictions that Hamfests may suffer due to the increase in online 
sales during and following the pandemic.

It was clear there was an increase in the number of people both at the 
indoor flea market halls and in the main trader and exhibitor hall.  While 
there were no new major radio announcements -- other than we already know of 
from Hamvention -- it was good to see Kenwood back with a stall but a shame 
that only Yaesu's agents represented them. ICOM was there with their usual 
impressive large display area and competing in size was a new company to the 
amateur radio market - Aaronia a manufacturer of high quality test 
equipment.

All in all, it was a very uplifting event.

Just as important was the announcement that the required legislative 
document had just been signed to implement the new German entry level "N 
class" amateur radio licence. The regulations will come into force on the 
21st of June 2024, the week before next years "Ham Radio" event between the 
28th and 30th and indeed the very first examinations for this new class of 
licence will take place at "HAM RADIO 2024." The new licence will allow 
access to 70cm, 2m and 10m running a maximum of 10 watts and will conform to 
CEPT specifications for an entry level licence. 

This is Ed Durrant DD5LP.

**
FCC SEEKS INPUT ON COMMERCIAL USE OF HF SPECTRUM

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Following years of experimental use of the frequencies 
between 2 and 25 MHz - a range the FCC considers underutilized - members of 
the Shortwave Modernization Coalition have asked the agency for rule changes 
that would permit fixed, long-distance, time-sensitive transmission of data 
by commercial entities. The FCC is requesting public comment on the proposed 
rule change, which the Commission said would not have an impact on that part 
of the spectrum used exclusively by amateur radio, maritime or aeronautical 
services.

A rule change would make the frequencies available to regular commercial 
operations. At present only 61 of the 21,507 active licenses for frequencies 
between 2 and 25 MHz are for industrial and business use, according to the 
FCC.

The businesses seeking access have relied until now on satellite, fiber, 
microwave and millimeter wave wireless transmissions.

Shortwave Management Coalition members, who include such entities as 
companies in the financial markets, believe a rule change could widen access 
to other industries such as mining, petroleum and manufacturing.

Comments are due to the FCC within the month.

(FCC, SWLING POST)

**
FCC TO CONSIDER KEEPING FM6 RADIO FOR LOW-POWER TV

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In other action in Washington, it is shaping up to be a busy 
month for the Federal Communications Commission, which is considering 
whether low power analog TV stations that have a Channel 6 allocation can 
continue to broadcast analog FM radio. Kevin Trotman N5PRE tells us what's 
behind the issue.

KEVIN: In a small number of US markets, FM broadcast audio has long been 
available from TV stations making use of a subcarrier 250 kHz from the top 
of the Channel 6 frequencies. At the FCC's open meeting on July 20th, the 
FCC will look at an option it favors: permitting these low-power TV stations 
to continue this practice as a supplementary service even after the TV 
stations' conversion to digital.

The FCC believes that preserving the operations for those 13 low-power 
stations would benefit the public interest, noting as well that there is no 
record of TV interference with the adjacent FM channels, known as FM6 
stations. The FCC wrote in a fact sheet on its website that it has not 
received complaints with credible evidence showing anything to the contrary.

FM6 radio is permitted to operate only on 87.75 MHz and the service may only 
be offered within the low-power TV station's coverage area and on a non-
interference basis.

This is Kevin Trotman N5PRE.

(FCC)

**
CLIPPERTON ISLAND DXPEDITION TO INCLUDE SATELLITE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In case you've marked your calendar for January of next 
year, hoping to make contact with the Clipperton Island DXpedition, there's 
extra good news if you are a satellite enthusiast. Neil Rapp WB9VPG 
explains.

NEIL: When members of the Perseverance DX Group call QRZ in January of 2024 
from Clipperton Island, they'll have an extra way to make contact. The team 
just announced that the TX5S DXpedition will include satellite operations. 
The team's satellite station manager, Andreas N6NU, reported in a recent 
press release that the team hopes to use the IO-117 GreenCube satellite, 
which not only has a generous footprint over the island but has passes that 
last more than an hour.

The uninhabited atoll in the eastern Pacific Ocean will be home for the team 
for 16 days as they use SSB, CW, RTTY and FT8. This is the 38th most wanted 
DX according to Clublog - and it is IOTA number NA-011.

This is Neil Rapp WB9VPG.

(AMSAT, CLIPPERTON ISLAND WEBSITE)

**
HONORS FOR FILM ABOUT HAM CLUB IN SCOTLAND

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: There's nothing like a good contest to bring out the thrill 
of competition in some hams. In Scotland, however, one amateur radio group 
is enjoying the status of being one of the top winners at - of all things - 
a film festival. Jeremy Boot G4NJH explains what happened.

JEREMY: Hams in the Aberdeen Amateur Radio Society had the kind of 
performance you might not see in a DX contest, a sprint or even in a QSO 
party. They were among the top winners at this year's Doric Film Festival, 
an event that shines a light on filmmakers who celebrate Doric culture and 
language in their work. The five-minute production is colorful, lively and 
entirely in the Doric language. Interestingly enough, this is not the radio 
society's first appearance in a film. A 12-minute film, "Hams," was released 
in 1961 and is available for viewing online in the Moving Image Archives of 
the National Library of Scotland. That film, however, is in black and white 
- and in English.

Doric, once the official language of Scotland, is still widely spoken in the 
country's Northeast. The festival's winning films were screened last month 
at the awards ceremony on the campus of Robert Gordon University in 
Aberdeen.

The stars of the radio society's film are, of course, the many operators in 
the club and they are seen sending Morse Code and talking to the 
International Space Station. There is even a cameo appearance by a pig. Of 
course, you'll have to watch the film on YouTube to understand why. See the 
link to the society's film in the text version of this week's Newsline 
script at arnewsline.org

[DO NOT READ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LN5v8xkHIXo ]

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(DORIC FILM FESTIVAL, NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND, ABERDEEN AMATEUR RADIO 
SOCIETY)


**
RADIO AMATEUR CHOSEN AMONG ENGINEERING'S "WOMEN OF INFLUENCE"

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A prominent West Coast business journal has named an active 
California YL among those who have left an impact on modern-day engineering. 
We get those details from Jack Parker W8ISH.

JACK: A third generation amateur radio operator, inspired by her father and 
her grandfather, has been selected for inclusion in the San Diego, 
California, Business Journal's list of Women of Influence in Engineering.

Michelle Thompson, W5NYV, a licensed ham for 25 years, belongs to the FCC's 
Technical Advisory Council and works on amateur satellite service regulatory 
reform. A Life Member of the ARRL, she is  technical specialist for the ARRL 
Field Organization's Southwestern Division.

She writes on her page on QRZ.com: [quote]  "Amateur radio is why I became 
an engineer and is the motivation for a large amount of the volunteer work I 
do. I give back to ARRL, IEEE, DEFCON, and many other organizations." 
[endquote] In 2018 she and two cofounders created the nonprofit Open 
Research Institute. ORI conducts open source research and development for 
amateur radio and other areas and provides its findings free.

This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

(WIA, QRZ)

**
SILENT KEY: ASOKA DA SILVA, 4S5BAK, VHF NET'S 'WEATHERMAN'

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A well-respected amateur in Sri Lanka, and a familiar voice 
on a popular evening net, has become a Silent Key. We hear about him from 
Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

JASON: The Radio Society of Sri Lanka held a special tribute VHF Tribute Net 
to honor Asoka da Silva, 4S5BAK, who became a Silent Key on the 26th of 
June, two months after his 75th birthday. The retired banker, who rose to 
prominence in the financial sector, was remembered by many who checked in on 
VHF or via Echolink during the one-hour net. The net was recorded by the 
society to present to Asoka's family as a gift.

A mainstay of the daily 9 p.m. net for the past three years, Asoka was a 
familiar voice who would share with his fellow hams a thorough, well-
researched weather report  that many looked forward to hearing. His last 
check-in on the net took place on the 9th of April. According to the radio 
society, even in the difficult final months of his life, Asoka was 
determined to upgrade the amateur radio licence he had first acquired 
following his retirement. Despite frequent hospitalizations, he successfully 
sat the General and Advanced exams and qualified for that sought-after 
upgrade.

The VHF tribute net allowed hams from elsewhere, including the United 
States, Canada and India, to check in with Victor Goonetilleke (goo-nuh-
till-ecke) 4S7VK as net control. They shared memories of Asoka, remembering 
him fondly as the net's "weatherman," and expressed their condolences to his 
family.

The radio society's own tribute online said [quote] "We have lost a dear 
friend, and his untimely departure leaves an immense void that will be 
difficult to fill." [endquote]

This is Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

(RSSL, YOUTUBE)

**

BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the IRLP 
Western Reflector Channel 9258 on Mondays at 7 p.m.

**
PROGRAM ROLLOUT FOR SCOUT CAMPS ON THE AIR

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A sweeping new program is in the works to encourage hams 
everywhere to make contacts with young hams involved in Scouting. Think of 
it as a push for hams to do a bit of scouting for Scouts.

It's called Scout Camps on the Air and it started as the dream of Matt KR8E. 
He saw it as a way for the ham population to have QSOs with Scout stations - 
stations based on camps that are owned or leased by the Scouting 
organization or those not at any camps but still known as Scout Stations on 
the Air.

Though the program is still a work in progress, the committee has added 
three active scouts who are deeply involved in amateur radio, hoping to add 
to the momentum. The committee has been asking Scout councils to provide 
input. Organizers are meanwhile developing an multi-level awards program to 
recognize licensed hams worldwide everywhere who have successful radio 
contacts with the Scouts.

You can follow the progress of Scout Camps on the Air, or get involved, by 
following the program on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. See the text 
version of this week's newscast script at arnewsline.org for the Twitter and 
Instagram handles of Scout Camps on the Air.

[DO NOT READ: Twitter handle is @SCOTA_k2bsa
Instagram handle is scota_k2bsa ]

(SCOUT CAMPS ON THE AIR)

**

WEST BENGAL HAMS ASSIST IN MISSING MOTHER'S RETURN

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Amateur radio operators in India have once again used their 
extensive network of contacts to bring about a family reunion. Graham Kemp 
VK4BB gives us their story.

GRAHAM: A mother in India who went missing at a fair 17 years ago while her 
three children were on an amusement ride is heading back home to Bihar 
thanks to local radio amateurs. Following the separation, the children had 
come to believe their mother had long since died. Their fears were proven 
wrong, however, after police enforcing the recent COVID-19 lockdown saw her 
wandering the streets outside her home village, unable to speak. They took 
her for hospital evaluation. From there she was transferred to the 
Missionaries of Charity Home where she remained until the home asked the 
West Bengal Radio Club for assistance. Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, the 
club's secretary, told the website etvbharat.com (E TEE VEE BARRAT DOT COM) 
that the radio club sent pictures to amateur radio operators they know 
throughout India. A reply ultimately came from the woman's daughter in 
Bihar, though the hams there. The daughter told the West Bengal hams she had 
been seeking her mother for years and that she was feared dead. At the time 
the family's story appeared in the local media, a reunion was being planned.

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

(ETVBHARAT.COM)  

**

WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, be listening for Rag, LB3RE, operating on 40-6 metres as 
DU1/LB3RE from Luzon Island, IOTA number OC-042, until the 18th of July. See 
QRZ.com for QSL details.

Be listening for a six-member team of activators using the callsign RI1OR (R 
Eye One Oh R) from Bolshoy Solovetsky Island, IOTA number EU-066, from the 
25th to the 29th of July. They will operate CW, SSB and digital modes on 
160-10 metres. Send QSLs via RZ3EC.

Chasers of World Wide Flora & Fauna activations may want to listen for 
Bruno, F4JIK. He is touring Finland in his camper van and is on the air as 
OH/F4JIK/p until the 13th of July.  Listen for him on SSB on 40, 20 and 15 
metres from several Finnish Flora &
 Fauna locations.

Listen for Ben, PE5B, who will be active as PJ7/PE5B from Sint Maarten, IOTA 
number NA-105, from the 7th to the 14th of July. He will be operating SSB 
and RTTY while doing training and demonstrations of ham radio and HF EmComm 
to local groups. QSL via LoTW.

(DX WORLD.NET, 425 DX BULLETIN)

**

KICKER: WHEN THE "INTELLIGENCE" IS NOT FOR REAL

ANCHOR: Imagine AI - artificial intelligence - behind the radio mic? 
Well.....it has already arrived in broadcasting and that's giving us here at 
Newsline something to think about too. Here's Ralph Squillace KK6ITB to 
explain.

RALPH: In Portland, Oregon, the radio DJ known as Ashley Z Elzinga has some 
company in the studio: herself. The station, "Live 95.5" KBFF has begun 
using an artificial version of her voice to produce segments, using Futuri 
Media's RadioGPT during midday programming. Ashley Z is a syndicated talent 
heard on a number of other stations, including ones in Michigan and Seattle. 
The Oregon station is calling her "AI Ashley" and it even quotes her in the 
station's press release expressing her commitment to being the world's first 
AI DJ.

Meanwhile, students at the University of Florida have used RadioGPT to 
create an AI personality they have named "Q." Q is featured on the College 
of Journalism and Communications audio research and development platform, 
GHQ. According to a report in RadioWorld, RadioGPT generates scripts about 
relevant topics by scanning online content and social media and then voices 
the script using AI.

It does leave us wondering, however: How long before something called HamGPT 
is developed and learns to scan the solar reports, the propagation maps, the 
DX clusters and even our personal details on QRZ.com, handing out "5 9" and 
"7 3?"

Perhaps for that answer - for now - we'll have to Google it.

This is Ralph Squillace KK6ITB.

(RADIOWORLD, RADIOINSIGHT.COM)

**
DO YOU HAIKU? ROGER ROGER!

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We hope our listeners have been enjoying the Amateur Radio 
Newsline haiku challenge. We certainly have! In the spirit of fun and 
perhaps a little bit of literary adventure, we've been inviting listeners to 
channel their most creative selves and share the joy of ham radio in the 
form of a haiku. On our website, arnewsline.org, you will find a submission 
form for sending your most poetic offering. To qualify, you need to follow 
traditional haiku form: The first line is five syllables, the second line is 
seven syllables and the finishing third line has another five syllables. We 
cannot accept any other formats.

Our team will pick from the best submissions that follow the 5/7/5 syllable 
rule and represent the love of amateur radio. Your prize? For now, bragging 
rights -- and a featured spot for your haiku on the Amateur Radio Newsline 
website. We may have a surprise for you at the end of the year, however. So 
visit our website at arnewsline.org and take a look at this week's winning 
ham radio haiku.


DO YOU HAVE NEWS?

Do you have a piece of Amateur Radio News that you think Newsline would be 
interested in? We are not talking about advertising your club's upcoming 
hamfest or field day participation, but something that is out of the 
ordinary. If so, send us a brief overview via the contact page at 
arnewsline.org. If it's newsworthy and we would like to cover it, we'll get 
back to you for more details.

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Amateur Radio Daily; AMSAT News Service; 
ARRL; CQ Magazine; David Behar K7DB; DX-World.net; FCC; 425DXNews; 
ETVBHARAT.com QRZ.COM; RadioInsight.com; Shortwave Listening Post; 
shortwaveradio.de; Wireless Institute of Australia; and you our listeners, 
that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline.  We remind our listeners that 
Amateur Radio Newsline is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that 
incurs expenses for its continued operation. If you wish to support us, 
please visit our website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you 
all. We also remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please 
leave us a 5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn 
Eve Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide, 
I'm Stephen Kinford N8WB in Wadsworth Ohio saying 73. As always we thank you 
for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2023. All rights 
reserved.

73 de Bill, PY2BIL
PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 07-jul-2023 08:03 E. South America Standard Time






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