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PY2BIL > ARNR     07.06.24 14:01l 393 Lines 17801 Bytes #168 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2432 for Friday June 7th, 202
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<DB0ERF<DK0WUE<PI8ZTM<PI8LAP<PA8F<VE3CGR<KB5YZB<W0ARP<
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Sent: 240607/0802 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.2.061  $:90159PY2BIL
From: PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2432 for Friday June 7th, 2024

Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2432 with a release date of Friday, 
June 7th, 2024 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. The ARRL provides few insights into last month's 
cyberattack. "Mega POTA" sweeps the parks of Puerto Rico -- and learning 
about amateur radio, for college credit! All this and more as Amateur Radio 
Newsline Report Number 2432 comes your way right now.

**
BILLBOARD CART

**
ARRL GIVES ITS ACCOUNT OF RECENT NETWORK SHUTDOWN

JIM/ANCHOR: As phones came back into service at the Connecticut headquarters 
of the ARRL, the league's communications remained sparse and carefully 
worded about the apparent cyberattack that disabled its networks, servers 
and other systems, including Logbook of the World.

Breaking a public silence of not quite one week, the league said on its 
website that the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and third-party experts 
had been called in, early on, to help investigate. The league said that 
managers formed an incident response team.

The league's message, posted on the 4th of June on its website, offered no 
insights as to whether the source of the network shutdown came from an 
internal or external attack but said the FBI told them they considered the 
incident [quote] "unique." [unquote]. The league offered no further 
explanation. The ARRL has said that no sensitive data, such as credit card 
numbers, had been exposed and any details about members were already 
publicly accessible from other sites.

The ARRL's message said that the staff was testing applications and 
interfaces with an eye toward restoring their proper operation - but did not 
elaborate further.

The ARRL Contest Portal was to be available on a limited basis, as the dates 
for International Digital Contest and the June VHF Contest approached.

Membership renewals were also being accepted online and by phone.

(ARRL)

**
MEGA POTA SWEEPS THE PARKS OF PUERTO RICO

JIM/ANCHOR: Among ham radio outdoor enthusiasts, is anything quite so big as 
POTA? Try MEGA POTA. In fact, that's what hams in Puerto Rico did late last 
month - and Andy Morrison K9AWM tells us how things went.

ANDY: The nature of ham radio and the nature of nature itself connected in a 
very big way last month in the Caribbean as hams in Puerto Rico enjoyed the 
simultaneous activation of more than 20 parks throughout the island on the 
same day. One of the organizers, Emilio, WP4KEY, told Amateur Radio Newsline 
in an email: [quote] "May 26, 2024 has been written in gold letters in the 
book of amateur radio in the Caribbean because this has been the largest 
event to be held." [endquote]

It was as much a celebration as an activation. Hams participated from the 
Amateur Radio Alliance KP4ARA, the Lares Radio Club, KP4NET, and numerous 
other groups worked stations in South America, Australia, Europe, the US and 
elsewhere in the world. Emilio told Newsline that this was the second event 
of its kind but the inaugural MEGA POTA, held on November 16th, 2019, was 
nowhere near this size.

As Emilio told Newsline: [quote] "Mega POTA offered for activators a unique 
experience that blends technology with the great outdoors and hunters a 
unique opportunity to get those sometimes difficult to get clubs and parks 
including some for the first time as activators." [endquote]
Emilio activated with his wife, Wanda, KP4NYC and his son, Emilio, KP4HBK.

MEGA POTA 2025 is already in the works. Emilio said that next year's 
activations will include more demonstrations for members of the public 
stopping by and offer guided tours of the island's cultural and natural 
attractions. Next year he expects to have even more to celebrate.

This is Andy Morrison K9AWM.

(EMILIO ORTIZ JR., WP4KEY)

**
WEEKEND "EXPLOSION" OF SOTA IN EUROPE

JIM/ANCHOR: Planning and coordination were at the root of what made Puerto 
Rico's MEGA POTA a success. Somehow, however, the stars seem to have aligned 
on their own among Summits on the Air enthusiasts in a number of European 
countries. Jeremy Boot G4NJH explains.

JEREMY: Several groups of SOTA hams have decided - quite independently - to 
declare the 8th and 9th of June a big Summits on the Air weekend, each in 
their own way. SOTA activators in Switzerland and France are preparing for 
their respective Mountain Activation Days during the weekend. In Wales, the 
big summit-to-summit event on Saturday the 8th will be followed by a hog 
roast. VHF is not left out with the Spanish VHF-SOTA-FM event on the 8th and 
in England, the 144 MHz Backpackers scaling summits on the 9th. 

If propagation is cooperative, all this could create some very full logs. 
Sometimes, even when there is no organized international effort, enthusiasm 
seems to help things along.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(SOTA REFLECTOR)

**
PROJECT OSCAR HANDS OFF SATELLITE DUTIES, FUNDS TO AMSAT

JIM/ANCHOR: For more than six decades, Project OSCAR was a success - but now 
Project OSCAR is no more. Neil Rapp WB9VPG tells us about the organization 
that built and launched the first ham radio satellite and all that followed. 

NEIL: Amateur radio satellites were the reason Project OSCAR came into 
being, from that first 22-day orbit by OSCAR 1 in 1961, followed by 
subsequent satellites -- a total of 121 OSCARS over six decades. Now the 
organization is being dismantled and AMSAT is to receive its remaining 
funds. AMSAT has also been given the right to use the term OSCAR, which is 
an acronym for Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio.

AMSAT expressed its appreciation for the 64-year journey of the early 
organization and issued a statement on AMSAT News saying: [quote] "The large 
and growing amateur satellite community owes its existence to those early 
pioneers who decided that amateur radio had a place in space and made it 
happen. AMSAT is committed to upholding the legacy of those early pioneers 
and keeping Amateur Radio in Space." [endquote]

This is Neil Rapp WB9VPG.

(AMSAT NEWS)

**
CHINESE MOON LANDER RETURNING WITH ROCK, SOIL SAMPLES

JIM/ANCHOR: A special delivery is underway - the first rock and soil samples 
from the far side of the moon. China's mission to the dark side of the moon 
is returning with that precious cargo, the first samples of its kind 
gathered during any lunar exploration. The Chinese National Space 
Administration mission faced special challenges. Among them, the uncrewed 
Chang'e mission relied on communication with a specially deployed relay 
satellite because there is no direct radio communication with the dark side 
of the moon.

(BBC, NASA)

**

ACTIVITIES BALLOONING FOR STEM AMATEUR RADIO CLUB

JIM/ANCHOR: Created just this past February, the STEM Amateur Radio Club is 
already getting in quite a bit of air time -- with balloons. Jack Parker 
W8ISH catches up with their progress.

JACK: Kids and balloons naturally go together but when the kids - some as 
young as 9 - are ham radio operators, you can bet that what fires them up 
more than anything are pico balloons. With Bill Brown, WB8ELK, as her 
mentor, Vicki Carnes, AD3I, who started the club, guided the youngsters in 
launching two pico balloons from the Xenia Fairgrounds during Hamvention. 
They are now preparing for a launch near Andrew Jackson State Park in South 
Carolina during Field Day using the club callsign, N4TVV-1.

Vicki believes this is amateur radio showcasing some of its more educational 
moments to young hams. She told Newsline: [quote] "The really awesome thing 
about pico-ballooning, other than the technical side, is kids learn about 
World Geography and it sticks with them. I think it stays with them because 
it's personal. Their balloon's tracking means something to them." [endquote] 
In short, if they didn't know anything about the Aleutian Islands or the 
Canary Islands before, they do now because the one surviving balloon - W8BI-
12 - had those locations on its very trackable path. It recently completed a 
circumnavigation of the globe, 8 miles above the planet, and the kids are 
along for the ride.

If you want to share tracking its 2-metre signal with them, visit aprs.fi – 
the live APRS map - and in the top right corner, enter the call sign.

This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

(VICKI CARNES, AD3I)

**
BOEING STARLINER LAUNCHES AT LAST

NASA astronauts Suni Williams, KD5PLB, and Butch Wilmore at last launched 
into space on the morning of Wednesday the 5th of June aboard the first 
Boeing Starliner, following a series of aborted attempts and delays tied to 
technical issues dating back to May. The pair are scheduled to stay on 
International Space Station for about 10 days.

NASA's commercial crew program has a .3 billion contract with commercial 
space transport providers and the two astronauts comprise Boeing's first 
crewed mission in that program.

(YAHOO NEWS, NASA)

**
BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including the N8NC 
repeater of the North Coast Amateur Radio Club in Brunswick, Ohio on Sundays  
at 8 p.m. during the weekly information net.

**
REGISTRATION HEATS UP FOR INTERNATIONAL LIGHTHOUSE AND LIGHTSHIP WEEKEND

JIM/ANCHOR: June's arrival means it's time to shine a little light on those 
beloved beacons of maritime safety, the lighthouses and lightships around 
the world. The weekend event coming up in August is not a contest but you 
might say there's a little bit of friendly competition going on right now 
among operators in various countries to see who can register as many of 
these historic structures as they can. Jason Daniels VK2LAW tells us about 
it.

JASON: Lighthouses and lightships have typically transmitted reliable light 
beams to guide ships home from their journeys over the years. On August 17th 
and 18th, hams will be at many of those same sites transmitting signals from 
Australia, Argentina, Germany, the UK, Belgium, South Africa, the US - and 
any other country that takes pride in the history that makes each of them so 
special.

Some stations will be QRP; others may operate QRO. Some stations will be 
operated solo and others by teams. There are no restrictions, just 
guidelines. Registration is not mandatory but organisers strongly encourage 
it.

Visit the website illw.net for details.

This is Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

(ILLW) 

**

BROADCAST AM RADIO CONSIDERS FULL SHUTDOWN IN JAPAN

JIM/ANCHOR: The United States isn't the only country which has seen debates 
over the future of commercial AM radio broadcasting. In Japan, AM 
transmitters are being increasingly shut off, as we hear from Graham Kemp 
VK4BB.

GRAHAM: A handful of Japan's AM radio broadcasters have ended their 
transmissions. Operators say it's only for a trial period so officials can 
study the impact of the loss of this form of radio broadcasting which has 
been on the air in Japan for 99 years. Thirteen of Japan's 47 stations have 
gone silent, according to the Japan Today website. The trial shutdown is 
being conducted so that the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications 
can evaluate the impact of the suspensions.

AM station operators cite the increasing cost of maintaining and upgrading 
facilities that far exceed the cost of stations that broadcast FM. They also 
note that FM radio and other forms of transmission are not prone to the same 
static and noise that can plague an AM signal. Many AM radio broadcasters 
are already offering something called "Wide range FM" as an alternative, 
allowing the same programs to be broadcast on FM radio, including public 
safety announcements for disaster preparedness. The increased popularity of 
podcasts also affects the number of radio listeners.

Japan's communications ministry says the trial shutdown could finish as late 
as January 2025. At that point, the broadcasters will have to make up their 
minds whether to return to the air or go silent forever.

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

(JAPAN TODAY)


**
HAMCATION COMMITTEE ACCEPTING AWARD NOMINEES

JIM/ANCHOR: It's no secret that leaders such as Gordon West WB6NOA and 
Carole Perry WB2MGP stand for the very best of what we can give back to the 
amateur radio community. Recognizing this, awards carrying their names are 
given each year at Hamcation in Orlando, Florida, where the next convention 
is set for February 7th through 9th of 2025. The Hamcation committee will 
accept nominations for these recognition awards through the 1st of November.

Hams whose efforts have focused on the nurturing and advancement of young 
radio operators may be nominated for the Carole Perry Educator of the Year 
award is bestowed on an individual who has made an outstanding contribution 
to educating, mentoring and advancing youth in amateur radio.

Nominees for the Gordon West Ambassador of the Year Award should demonstrate 
ambassadorship in the true sense of the word, engaging in volunteer efforts 
that include promoting amateur radio at public events, fostering 
understanding among non-amateurs and helping spread good will.

You will find links in the text version of this week's newscast that give 
additional information about the awards and provide access to nomination 
forms.

[DO NOT READ:   www.hamcation.com/award-gordon-west

www.hamcation.com/award-carol-perry  ]

(AMATEUR NEWS WEEKLY, HAMCATION)

**

WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, listen for Mike, AB5EB, on the HF bands as HQ9EB from 
Roatan Island, IOTA Number NA-057, in Honduras until the 11th of June. Mike 
will also compete in the ARRL June VHF Contest taking place from the 8th 
through to the 10th of June. QSL via his home call

The RSGB's National Radio Centre at Bletchley Park is commemorating the 80th 
anniversary of the D-Day Landings by hosting special event station GB2DAY 
through to the 9th of June. Listen on 80 and 40 metres where operators will 
be using CW and SSB. QSL via eQSL.

Five radio operators will be using their personal callsigns from Isla 
Gorgona, IOTA Number SA-017, from the 7th through to the 11th of June. 
Listen for HK4C, HK4LPA, HK4SSI, HK4T and HK4X. A special event callsign may 
be announced later. Operators will be using SSB, FT8 and FT4 on 80 through 6 
metres. They will also operate via satellite. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

Listen for John, K9EL, who is operating holiday style as FS/K9EL from St. 
Martin, IOTA number NA-105, through to the 19th of June. Although he will be 
on the HF bands, his main focus will be 6 metres. See QRZ.com for QSL 
details.

(425 DX BULLETIN)

**
KICKER: THIS COLLEGE CLASS IS ALSO A CLASS OF AMATEUR RADIO LICENSE

JIM/ANCHOR: Never mind graduation ceremonies. At one prestigious university 
in Pennsylvania, the recent end of the semester ends not with a cap and gown 
but....an amateur radio license. Travis Lisk N3ILS explains.

TRAVIS: The three-credit course is called Introduction to Amateur Radio and 
it recently concluded its spring semester in the College of Engineering at 
Carnegie Mellon University. This isn't the kind of weekend ham cram of one-
day course many US amateurs have become accustomed to: This technology, 
history and a bit of sociology, taking students from the Radio Act of 1912, 
which gave the public its rights to the electromagnetic spectrum to antenna-
building, satellite communications and operating safely in the field.

Assistant teaching professor Tom Zajdel, AA3TZ, told public radio station W-
E-S-A that ham radio's changing technology will always ensure it has a 
future.

The course was introduced in 2023 and - never mind getting an A or a B - the 
real test is sitting for the FCC exam.

Anish Singhani, K3RTL, who took the course, is now president of the 
university radio club.

He told the public radio station: [quote] “I think it's one of the very 
unique things about ham radio: It's a people thing. At its core, it's about 
the people." [endquote]

This is Travis Lisk N3ILS.

(WESA PUBLIC RADIO, CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY)

**
DO YOU HAIKU?

Don't forget the Amateur Radio Newsline haiku challenge. If you're not too 
busy tuning your antennas or chasing the latest DXpedition, pick up a pencil 
and share your experience by sending an original haiku to us here at 
Newsline. Use the entry form on our website, arnewsline.org and please 
follow the rules for writing your three-line haiku -- sorry but we cannot 
accept any entries that aren't written in traditional haiku form. Share with 
fellow listeners the poetry that is inspired by your ham radio experience!

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to the ARRL; Amateur Radio Weekly; AMSAT; BBC; 
Carnegie Mellon University; CQ Magazine; David Behar K7DB; DXWorld; Emilio 
Ortiz Jr., WP4KEY; 425DXNews; Hamcation; Japan Today; NASA; QRZ.com; 
shortwaveradio.de; Vicki Carnes, AD3I; W-E-S-A Public Radio; Yahoo News; 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 Jim Damron N8TMW in Charleston West Virginia saying 73. 
As always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is 
Copyright 2024. All rights reserved.


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

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BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 07-jun-2024 08:02 E. South America Standard Time






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