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Shortwave Radiogram 11580 khz 2030 UTC 20170723

Jul 23rd, 2017 (edited)
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  1. Before RSID: <<2017-07-23T20:31Z MFSK-32 @ 11580010+1500>>
  2. ut Úedpt soat \xRi¯h FooS Ld»4³
  3.  
  4.  
  5.  
  6.  
  7. Welcome to program 5 of Shortwave Radiogram.
  8.  
  9. I'm Kim Andrew Elliott in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
  10.  
  11. Here is the lineup for today's program, all idsl
  12. 1500 Hz:
  13.  
  14. 1:28 Program preview (now)
  15. 2:34 Navy vessels use signal lamps for text messaginyis coming to Europe*
  16. 19:56 Worrieerence in Euroosing announcements*
  17.  
  18. * wvr
  19. Please send reception reports to radiogram@verizon.net
  20.  
  21. And visit hthitter: @SWRadiogram
  22.  
  23.  
  24. 
  25. th
  26.  
  27.  
  28.  
  29. From the U.S. Navy:
  30.  
  31. Text Tech: Can Navy Vessels Use Shipboard Signal Lamps for Text
  32. Messa t Warren Duffie Jr., Office of Naval Research
  33. ¹8 tty 2017
  34.  
  35. ARLINSF- Tt° USS Stout
  36. flashed light hnje to the USS Monterey, located pn ttown signal lamp nnted camera to receive the incoming
  37. Morse code-which then was
  38. converted into text appearing on an accompanying handheld device.
  39.  
  40. Peering at the device connected to the Monterey's signal lamp,
  41. Scott Lowery chuckled as one word popped up on the screen:
  42. "random."
  43.  
  44. "I asked them to text me sooenaled the
  45. word 'random,' " said Lowery, an engineer at Naval Surface
  46. Warfare Center (NSWC) Panama City, Florida. "Simple, but it shows
  47. the system is working."
  48.  
  49. Lowery recently was at Naval Station Norfo_, Virginia,
  50. conducting a demonstration of the Flashing Light to Text
  51. Converter (FLTC)-a ship-tomhat he's
  52. helped develop to enable U.S. Navy vessels to use their signal
  53. gessage each other.
  54.  
  55. Sponsoredmi of Naval Research's (ONR) TechSolutions
  56. program, FLTC features (1) a camja r t na a
  57. signal lamp and hone in on Morse code bursts from another lamp
  58. within view, and (2) a hand-held device m computer
  59. connected to this caoages sent and
  60. received.
  61.  
  62. Linking the commercially available camera and device is a
  63. proprietaryeAhat uses specialªoftware algorithms
  64. to process incoming light flashes into high-frequency signals-and
  65. then convert those into extmessages. To reply to a text, ase the device to type a response that is
  66. sentfoas
  67. a Morse code message via 3owered LED lights that flash
  68. automatically.
  69.  
  70. Since World War II, the process for sending messages using signal
  71. lamps has barely changed. It requires someone trained in Morse
  72. code to operate the lamp's shutter by hand, and involves a lot of
  73. time receiving, decoding, and replying to messages. Using FLTC,
  74. Sailors can quickly anpe and send messages-with fewer
  75. mistakes-even hahey don't know Morse code.
  76. ½"Tt best part of this flashing light converter is how easy it is
  77. for Sailors to use," said Lowery. "It's very intuitive because it
  78. mirrors the messaging systems used on iPhones. You just type your
  79. message and send it with the push oa also would be useful in certain "communications-denied"
  80. scenarios at sea where satellaHons is risky or
  81. unavailable, said ONR Command Master Chief Matt Matteson.
  82.  
  83. "FLTC could be extremely valuable if a ship's main communications
  84. go down or if it needs to maintain a low electronic signature to
  85. avoid detection by an adversary," he said.
  86.  
  87. FLTC originated in 2015, when the Naval Surface and Mine
  88. Warfighting Development Center (SMWDC) in San Diego sent a
  89. request to ONR's TechSolutions program for a text-messaging
  90. interface for signaling between ships. TechSolutions is ONR's
  91. rapid-response science and technology program that develops
  92. prototype technologies to address problems voiced by S‹ and
  93. Marines, ualy within 12-18 months.
  94.  
  95. To provide a solution to SMWDC, TechSolutions selected and funded
  96. NSWC Panama City and a commercial company-Creative MicroSystems
  97. Corp.-to develop the components of FLTC.
  98.  
  99. "In the future, we envision a standard retrofit kit that could be
  100. placed on all existing signal lamps," said Lowery.
  101.  
  102. Later this year, TechSolutions will deliver prototype FLTCs to
  103. SMWDC for further testing and evaluation. Lowery and his team
  104. hope to see the system issued throughout the fleet next year.
  105.  
  106. Watch a video: https://youtu.be/8dpdBPyIoLA of the FLTC
  107. demonstration.
  108.  
  109. Warren Duffie Jr. is a contractor for ONR Corporate Strategic
  110. Communications.
  111.  
  112. http://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=101513
  113.  
  114.  
  115. 
  116. ls g t
  117. 
  118.  
  119.  
  120.  
  121. Image: From the accompanying video ...
  122.  
  123.  
  124. 
  125. twtQt
  126. ª
  127. Sending Pic:225x141C;
  128.  
  129. 
  130. tJco
  131.  
  132.  
  133.  
  134. This is Shortwave Radiogram
  135. tend reception reports to radiogram@verizon.net
  136.  
  137.  
  138. From Deutsche Welle:
  139.  
  140. Hyperloop travel is coming to Europe
  141.  
  142. Oluwakemi Aladesuyi
  143.  
  144. 17 July 2017
  145.  
  146. Be it rail or road, plane or boat, there are four main types of
  147. transportation humans use to get around. To most traC
  148. other way seems like a vision from the future, but the future may
  149. only be a pod ride away.
  150.  
  151. "Hyperloop" is a system of vacuum tubes that could theoretically
  152. transport
  153. in capsules at subsonic speeds.
  154. While the idea of pneumatic tube travel has been tossed around in
  155. scientific circles , it was only really in 2013
  156. when venture capitalist Elon Musk brought the technological
  157. challenge into the 21st century.
  158.  
  159. The modern innovation is to have capsules levitated by air
  160. pressure or magnetic rails propelled through an extremely low
  161. pressure tube. Passengers would glide at aircraft speeds without
  162. the emissions. Commuteel twice as fast as high speed
  163. trains, and it could cost half as much to build.
  164.  
  165. Futurists are eager to laud hyperloop as a revolution to the way
  166. we live now. A handful of private companies are racing to develop
  167. the technology that could reinvent transportation. One of them,
  168. the Los Angeles-based startup Hyperloop One, announced this week
  169. that it had fully tested its hyperloop system in a vacuum
  170. environment in May.
  171.  
  172. "We'll be able to move between cities as if cities themselves are
  173. metro stops," said Hyperloop One co-founder Shervin Pishevar in a
  174. statement. Yet moving capsules through a vacuum tube is an
  175. important technological hurdle in developing the hyperloop
  176. corridor. The low pressure environment is critical to making the
  177. journey between cities like Helsinki and Stockholm or Berlin and
  178. Munich take less than 30 minutes.
  179.  
  180. Partnerships for the future
  181.  
  182. Even though Hyperloop One and its competitors are in the
  183. relatively early stages of development, that hasn't stopped them
  184. from proposing routes and getting investors and governments on
  185. board. The US-based Hyperloop Transportation Technologies (HTT)
  186. has an exploratory agreement to develop a hyperloop corridor
  187. between the Czech cities of Brno and Prague to Bratislava in
  188. Slovakia. Recently the company announced that it had licensed its
  189. technology to the government of South Korea.
  190.  
  191. Contrary to the innovate first, ask for permission later that's
  192. been the playbook model snstry disruptors like Uber and
  193. Airbnb, HTT and Hyperloop One seem to see partnerships as a
  194. tandem strategy to getting their technology off the ground.
  195.  
  196. Hyperloop One's strategy is been to sponsor "global challenges"
  197. or competitions to collect bids on how different regions could
  198. implement their technology. Last month at their Vision for Europe
  199. summit in Amsterdam, the company unveiled an ambitious set of
  200. proposals that would connect some 75 million Europeans living in
  201. 44 cities.
  202.  
  203. Melanie Schultz van Haegen, self-proclaimed "hyperloop
  204. enthusiast" and Dutch Minister of Infrastructure and the
  205. Environment, gave the keynote speech. "Hyperloop can be the game
  206. changer," she said, listing as reasons growing traffic jams, the
  207. increasing numbers using public transportation and the need to
  208. reduce carbon emissions. "The Netherlands has every reason to
  209. encourage innovative mobility. If we don't our country will grind
  210. to a halt."
  211.  
  212. In addition to launching Europe's first hyperloop test track at
  213. Delft University in coordination withgyperloop One, the Dutchpeo stry is creating a uniform Mobility Act
  214. to make it easier to
  215. introduce new policy measures in the future.
  216.  
  217. "There needs to be an interconnect between entrepreneurs and
  218. policy makers," says Gillian Harrison, a research fellow at the
  219. University of Leeds' Institute for Transport Studies; but adds
  220. that it is essential that these kind of public-private
  221. partnerships are carried out correctly. "At the end of the day
  222. policy makers are civil servants and they are working on behalf
  223. of the public."
  224.  
  225. Build a better model
  226.  
  227. While there is always a risk that new technologies won't pan out,
  228. according to Harrison, what helps <kers "bet on the right
  229. horse" are good planning models.
  230.  
  231. "Models are only as good as the data and knowledge that the
  232. modelers have," she said. But the latest modelers are working on
  233. innovations in autonomous driving, not necessarily hyperloop.
  234.  
  235. During Hyperloop One's system test in May which was done without
  236. reporters present, the prototype levitated for just 5.3 seconds
  237. and reached a speed of 113 kilometer per hour (70 miles per
  238. hour).
  239.  
  240. Josh Giegel, president of engineering at Hyperloop One, said in a
  241. statement about the demonstration: "We've tested our hyperloop
  242. system; we know it works, and we're ready to deploy it to the
  243.  
  244. d."
  245.  
  246. The company ts beginning its next phase of testing which is meaP
  247. to get its systems up to a target speed of 400 kilometer per
  248. hour. In the meantime, as Hyperloop One and other companies
  249. invest time in planning routes and building strategic
  250. partnerships to prepare for regulatory hurdles, hopefully the
  251. technology can get up to speed.
  252.  
  253. http://www.dw.com/en/hyperloop-travel-is-coming-to-europe/a-39718112
  254.  
  255.  
  256. 
  257. o0
  258. 
  259.  
  260.  
  261.  
  262. Image: Prototype of a hyperloop tunnel from
  263. o ¾/hyperloop.warr.de/ ...
  264.  
  265.  
  266. 
  267.  
  268. 
  269. Sending Pic:224x120C; tt
  270.  
  271.  
  272. This is Shortwave Radiogram
  273.  
  274. Please send reception reports to radiogram@verizon.net
  275.  
  276.  
  277. From Southgate Amateur Radio News:
  278.  
  279. Deep concern over Radio Spectrum
  280.  
  281. 17 July 2017
  282.  
  283. At Friedrichshafen, IARU Region 1 President Don Beattie G3BJ said
  284. "I am deeply concerned about our ability to maintain a usable
  285. radio spectrum in some parts of suburban Europe"
  286.  
  287. Don Beattie G3BJ, gave an opening address at the Friedrichshafen
  288. Ham Radio 2017 event in which he covered the spectrum challenges
  289. of today.
  290.  
  291. "It is of little value having radio spectrum allocated to the
  292. amateur service if it is made unusable by the presence of
  293. multiple sources of interference – be it electrical interference
  294. or intruders in the amateur bands. And so IARU is deeply involved
  295. in the work of the international standards organisations, arguing
  296. for common sense in the setting of emission standards for
  297. electrical and electronic devices.
  298.  
  299. "Areas which are of current concern are solar photo-voltaic
  300. generators, wind generators, digital devices, VDSL+ and Wireless
  301. Power Transfer. Some would say that even with the work we are
  302. involved in on standards, much of the radio spectrum is becoming
  303. unusable in the suburban environment, and I have sympathy with
  304. this view."
  305.  
  306. http://www.southgatearc.org/news/2017/july/deep-concern-over-radio-spectrum.htm#.WXE5FFGQwY1
  307. (with link to full text of G3BJ's address)
  308.  
  309.  
  310. 
  311.  
  312. 
  313. Sending Pic:177x199C;Ä
  314.  
  315. 
  316.  
  317. wl
  318.  
  319.  
  320.  
  321. Transmission of Shortwave Radiogram is provided by:
  322.  
  323. WRMI, Radio Miami International, http://wrmi.net
  324.  
  325. and
  326.  
  327. Space Line, Bulgaria, http://spaceline.bg
  328.  
  329.  
  330. Please send re!ogram@verizon.net
  331.  
  332. And visit http://swradiogram.net
  333.  
  334. Twitter: @SWRadiogram
  335.  
  336. I'm Kim Elliott. Please join us for the next Shortwave
  337. Radiogram.
  338.  
  339.  
  340. 
  341. , i }
  342. 
  343. Sending Pic:218x171C;
  344.  
  345. 
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