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PA2AGA > HDDIG 12.11.99 12:24l 144 Lines 7231 Bytes #-9687 (0) @ EU
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becomes 5, 5 becomes 4, etc...) and add YOUR Name as number 6 on
the list. STEP 3: Change anything you need to, but try to keep this
article as close to original as possible. Now, post your amended
article to at least 200 newsgroups. (I think there are close to 24,000
groups) All you need is 200, but remember, the more you post, the
more money you make! This is perfectly legal! If you have any
doubts, refer to Title 18 Sec. 1302 & 1341 of the Postal lottery laws.
Keep a copy of these steps for yourself and, whenever you need
money, you can use it again, and again. PLEASE REMEMBER that
this program remains successful because of the honesty and integrity
of the participants and by their carefully adhering to the directions.
Look at it this way. If you are of integrity, the program will continue
and the money that so many others have received will come your way.
NOTE: You may want to retain every name and address sent to you,
either on a computer or hard copy and keep the notes people send you.
This VERIFIES that you are truly providing a service. (Also, it might
be a good idea to wrap the $1 bill in dark paper to reduce the risk of
mail theft.) So, as each post is downloaded and the directions
carefully followed, six members will be reimbursed for their
participation as a List Developer with one dollar each. Your name will
move up the list geometrically so that when your name reaches the #1
position you will be receiving thousands of dollars in CASH!!! What
an opportunity for only $6.00 ($1.00 for each of the first six people
listed above) Send it now, add your own name to the list and you're in
business! DIRECTIONS FOR HOW TO POST TO
NEWSGROUPS------------ STEP 1) You do not need to re-type this
entire letter to do your own posting. Simply put your cursor at the
beginning of this letter and drag your cursor to the bottom of this
document, and select 'copy' from the edit menu. This will copy the
entire letter into the computer's memory. STEP 2) Open a blank
'notepad' file and place your cursor at the top of the blank page. From
the 'edit' menu select 'paste'. This will paste a copy of the letter
into
notepad so that you can add your name to the list. STEP 3) Save your
new notepad file as a text file. If you want to do your postings in
different settings, you'll always have this file to go back to. STEP 4)
Use Netscape or Internet explorer and try searching for various
newsgroups (on-line forums, message boards, chat sites,
discussions.) STEP 5) Visit these message boards and post this article
as a new message by highlighting the text of this letter and selecting
paste from the edit menu. Fill in the Subject, this will be the header
that everyone sees as they scroll through the list of postings in a
particular group, click the post message button. You're done with
your first one! Congratulations...THAT'S IT! All you have to do is
jump to different newsgroups and post away, after you get the hang of
it, it will take about 30 seconds for each newsgroup! **REMEMBER,
THE MORE NEWSGROUPS YOU POST IN, THE MORE MONEY
YOU WILL MAKE!! BUT YOU HAVE TO POST A MINIMUM OF
200** That's it! You will begin receiving money from around the
world within days! You may eventually want to rent a P.O. Box due to
the large amount.
Reply to: JOHN HORSLEY at JNH@SILVERSTAR.COM
Ad No.: 1973 - Posted on: 04/12/99 16:41:03 PDT
>.
------------------------------
Date: 9 Nov 1999 12:27:22 GMT
From: Hans-Peter Zorn <hpz@gmx.net>
Subject: German packet radio
Rob Janssen <nomail@pe1chl.demon.nl> wrote:
> Do you have an estimation of the ratio between stations using off-the-shelf
> Japanese transceivers and those using faster "kit" designs?
> (the T7F is 9k6 as well...)
Yes, but for user access 9k6 is sufficient. And AFAIK you can do 19k2 with
the T7F if you modify it. Concerning the ratio between commercial and
homemade: The T7F is available both as kit and assembled. I know lots
of local DARC Clubs (OVs) which are currently doing T7F-assembly weekends.
Higher speed user-access is very rare. In Darmstadt they have a 230400
Bit/s Link on 3cm now and are planning a high speed access on 13cm.
There are 2 or 3 76k8 access points on 70cm, the problem here is that
there is only one channel for this bandwidth on 70cm. Interlinks with
76k8 are quite common, there are at least 15 of them. A very nice example
is DB0HUN which has 2 interlinks on 6cm, distance 23km and 68Km, running
at 76k8, no user access. On weekends there are usually abt 100-160 Qso
routed via this node, transferring about 500 Kbytes in 10 minutes.
The problem is, that there isnīt enough traffic to get those nodes to
their limits :-).
> Years ago, when I still visited the yearly Frankfurt/Darmstadt packet
> meetings, I always discussed with the locals about that. Our standpoint
> has always been "use PC hardware at the node. you get free upgrades in
> performance over the years, and you can't beat the price/performance".
> Theirs was always "PC hardware is not reliable, consumes too much power,
> is too large" etc.
This is still true today I think. The problem is the availability of hardware.
If the Flexnet group publishes a new design today, it is likely that it
will be obsolete some month later, because the manufacturer doesnīt ship a
certain part any more. This makes it very difficult. PC hardware *is*
unreliable and consumes much power which is a problem if your node is
installed at a location such as TV towers or high mountains "hill station".
I know several nodes which can only accessed every eight weeks or such.
You canīt put a linux box there, if it hangs in fsck every time the power
fails.
> So maybe it is coming our way now? :-)
This is likely (IMHO), but not because it is the technical superior
solution.
> BTW: I got an e-mail recently from someone asking about the availability of
> a PCI SCC card (presumably because he has no ISA slots available). Is that
> card available commercially?
Iīve seen it at the Weinheim/Mannheim UHF convention, I donīt know if it
is available commercially. It is very new and there are only linux drivers
as far as I know. Perhaps Jens is reading this and can comment himself.
Hans-Peter
--
Hans-Peter Zorn, Karlsruhe, Germany
http://www.stud.uni-karlsruhe.de/~uhsm/ hpz@gmx.net (preferred)
http://1409.org/people/hp/ hp@1409.org (hamradio stuff)
>.
------------------------------
Date: 10 Nov 1999 01:06:42 GMT
From: John Wiley <jw@physics.gmu.edu>
Subject: German packet radio
Charles Brabham <n5pvl@texoma.net> wrote:
: Hank Oredson <horedson@att.net> wrote in message
: news:807fa2$9g$1@bgtnsc03.worldnet.att.net...
To be continued in digest: hd_99_287C
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