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Current Feature Articles

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  • Nov 20 The Amateur Radio Crossword Puzzler
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  • Nov 20 Adventure in the Arctic: VO2A Expedition to Labrador
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  • Nov 20 Surfin': More Radio Piracy on the High Seas
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  • Nov 16 Youth@HamRadio.Fun: Fall Magic
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  • Nov 13 Surfin': The Real Pirate Radio
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  • Nov 06 Surfin': Homebrewing Today
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  • Nov 05 DX the Hard Way
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  • Nov 02 ARRL In Action: What Have We Been Up to Lately?
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  • Nov 01 It Seems to Us: It Doesn't Just Happen
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  • Oct 30 Surfin': Mapping Up

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    Don C. Wallace: W6AM, Amateur Radio's Pioneer -- This book traces the life of Don Wallace and with it the early history of Amateur Radio.

    Crystal Clear: The Struggle for Reliable Communications Technology in World War II -- Now Shipping! -- A story of the quartz crystal—a technology that changed the tide of World War II.

    50 Years of Amateur Radio Innovation -- This guided tour of more than 400 legendary radios from 1930 to 1980, depicts the “golden age” of American radio technology.

    RSGB 1940s Amateur Radio Special Edition -- 6 book set.

    The Secret Wireless War -- The Story of MI6 Communications--1939-1945 (World War II). This is an extraordinary story that includes hams among those patriots that undoubtedly helped the allied war effort. Softcover.

       

    Surfin': Additional Tools and Memories

    By Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU
    Contributing Editor
    October 6, 2006


    This week, the wayback machine only goes back to last week's and the week before to revisit Surfin' and reveal additional Web sites where you will find vintage QSL cards and useful tools.


    PY1NB's dxwatch.com offers a collection of useful online tools that are geared to DXers and contesters.

    More Collecting Memories

    In response to last week's column about online QSL card collections, Jerry Berg wrote, "Nice job on your Sep 29 `Surfin': Collecting Memories' column, but you never mentioned the Committee to Preserve Radio Verifications, which I chair, and which has over 35,000 QSLs under one roof (mostly for SW and MW broadcast stations). Check out On the Shortwaves.com, click on `The Committee to Preserve Radio Verifications' link, then scroll down and click on the `The CPRV QSL Gallery' link.

    Also, for what it's worth, my WA1LOU QSL cards are now online.

    More Tooling Around the Internet

    In response to the September 22 column about online tools, Felipe Ceglia, PY1NB, informed me about his online DX tools at his Web site, dxwatch.com, which Felipe calls "a Web cluster on steroids," allowing users to create lots of filter combinations to meet their needs. There is an "alert filters" feature that notifies users when a given spot is sent to the packet network that matches the criteria they have set up. There is a dynamic DX calendar that shows current, future and past DX operations. There is also a contest claimed-scores database that is quite useful for contesters.

    Convert is a free Windows application from Josh Madison that will convert the most popular units of distance, temperature, volume, time, speed, mass, power, density, pressure, energy and more, and includes the ability to create custom conversions (thank you, Scott Medlin, KF4GNL, and Danny Richardson, K6MHE, for the suggestion).

    Quad-Lock Unit Converter is another free Windows application that converts most of the units commonly encountered while solving engineering problems (thank you, Carl Zelich, AA4MI, for the suggestion).

    Carl also suggested Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP, a collection of downloadable tools that includes Power Calculator; this graphs and evaluates functions, and performs many different types of conversions.

    Being a Mac guy, I had Windows converter envy, so I started searching the Internet for comparable Mac OS X applications. My search led me to The Versatile Unit Converter, which is a free Mac OS X dashboard widget from Christophe Berthod, and qwikCONVERT from Ben Robinson, which is another free dashboard widget.

    Until next time, keep on surfin'.

    Editor's note: Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU, writes Surfin' on a weekly basis using two fingers on a keyboard that begs for more. To discuss keyboards, computers and radios, send e-mail or add comments to his blog.


       



    Page last modified: 03:38 PM, 05 Oct 2006 ET
    Page author: awextra@arrl.org
    Copyright © 2006, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.