Retired from Procter & Gamble after 27 years. Now consulting extensively. Background in mathematics, working on a wide variety of modeling, supply chain, analysis, expertise, business intelligence and social media applications.
Contact at: Linkedin
ShortBio Here.
To my surprise, in Slashdot, report on the growth of Ham radio. It doesn't require connectivity and in disasters, providing there is a power source, will still work.
Being a ham for nearly 40 years, this doesn't surprise me. In fact, this Saturday, I taught a one-day ham class at which 12 people were licensed. This included two brothers aged 10 and 12.
Hams that are really into emergency communications don't rely on power being available. They use batteries or solar panels.
1 comment:
Being a ham for nearly 40 years, this doesn't surprise me. In fact, this Saturday, I taught a one-day ham class at which 12 people were licensed. This included two brothers aged 10 and 12.
Hams that are really into emergency communications don't rely on power being available. They use batteries or solar panels.
73, <-- ham radio talk for "best regards"
Dan Romanchik, KB6NU
Post a Comment