(Hicksville, NY -- March 28, 2014) – Katie Allen, WY7KRA, has been appointed Sales and Marketing Manager for CQ Communications, Inc., effective immediately, it was announced today by company President and Publisher Richard Ross, K2MGA. Katie will be responsible for advertising sales for CQ Amateur Radio magazine (including the CQ Plus digital supplement), as well as marketing efforts for all CQ Communications products.
An active DXer and contester who recently earned her Extra Class license, Katie entered the world of amateur radio as the ARRL's Membership Manager in the 2000s, earning her first ham license under the guidance of other League staff members. She then sparked an effort to revitalize the ARRL staff radio club and station, W1HQ, both of which had fallen into inactivity, and helped move ham radio into the world of multimedia by producing and posting various operating videos on You Tube. She currently lives in Sundance, Wyoming with her husband, Dwayne, WY7FD.
"I love ham radio and the ham industry and I'm beyond thrilled to be back in it," says Katie. "I know there are challenges ahead, but my successes over the years have been with new projects or revitalizations ... so perhaps I've come home again to my area of specialty."
"Katie's enthusiasm for amateur radio and everything relating to it, along with her track record marketing our hobby to newcomers and her experience in multimedia and social networking, put her in an ideal position to help manufacturers and retailers best match up their products with our readers," notes CQ Publisher Dick Ross, K2MGA. Ross adds that "the introduction of CQ Plus has expanded CQ's audience beyond its traditional base of active hams to the broader hobby radio community. Katie's ability to connect with both groups, and to reach out via new media, will help add to our advertisers' ability to do the same."
CQ Communications, Inc., based in Hicksville, New York, publishes CQ Amateur Radio, including the CQ Plus digital supplement, in addition to CQ books, videos and related products. It also sponsors a comprehensive series of operating awards and the world's most popular on-air contests. Its flagship magazine, CQ Amateur Radio, is currently in its 70th year of continuous publication, now in both print and digital formats.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Monday, March 10, 2014
Dayton Simultaneously Honors, Snubs, ARRL
The Dayton Amateur Radio Association honored two long-time leaders of the ARRL with its annual Hamvention® awards, but pointedly snubbed the organization itself in its announcement.
Larry Price, W4RA, ARRL President
from 1984 to 1992 and president of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU)
from 1999 to 2009, is the recipient of the 2014 Amateur of the Year Award. This
year's Special Achievement Award goes to ARRL CEO Dave Sumner, K1ZZ. Yet
neither man's affiliation with the League is cited in the DARA announcement.
Price is recognized for his
"significant and direct impact on the development of amateur radio
throughout the world" in his role as IARU President, and Sumner is cited
for his work as a member of the "IARU observer team" as well as his
ongoing "efforts in crafting broadband over power lines (BPL) regulations
in conjunction with the FCC to reduce (harmful BPL) emissions." The fact
that he has led the ARRL for the past three decades is completely ignored.
Also honored this year are FLDIGI
developer David Freese, Jr., W1HKJ, with the Technical Achievement Award, and
the Gwinnett Amateur Radio Society in suburban Atlanta with the Club of the
Year Award. All awards will be presented at the Dayton Hamvention® on May
16-18.
"HamTV" on the Air From ISS
One of the early digital ATV images downlinked from the International Space Station as commissioning of the new HamTV system got under way in March. (NASA photo) |
This is not the first time amateur television pictures have been
transmitted from orbit. Back in 1985, Tony England, W0ORE, the second astronaut
to operate from space, transmitted slow-scan TV pictures on his 2-meter
downlink from the shuttle Challenger.
Here are some links for additional information and photos, courtesy of
the AMSAT News Service:
Webstream of the TV transmissions http://batc.tv/ch_live.php?ch=4
HamTV overview by Gaston Bertels ON4WF http://tinyurl.com/HamTVoverview
ISS HamTV Yahoo Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HamTV
ARISS-EU HamTV Bulletins http://www.ariss-eu.org/
HamTV on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Hamtvproject
RadioShack to Close 1100 Stores
Chances are there's a RadioShack store near you. But there's now about a one in five chance that there won't be one there much longer. The struggling electronics chain announced plans in early March "to close up to 1,100 underperforming stores," as it released financial reports showing it suffering a $400 million net loss in 2013, with nearly half of that coming in the fourth quarter alone.
Hams have long relied on the
chain as a source for components, and in the past, for ham gear, shortwave
receivers and scanners as well. In recent years, RadioShack has put a greater
focus on mobile phones and accessories, a market that has softened recently, as
new purchases have given way to replacements and upgrades. One recent bright
spot for hams has been a new focus on kits and building, in response to the
growth of the maker movement.
New Head of FCC Enforcement Bureau; ARRL to Seek More Amateur Enforcement
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has named Travis LeBlanc - a former Justice Department attorney - as acting
Chief of the Commission's Enforcement Bureau. According to an FCC announcement, LeBlanc is returning to Washington from California, where he has been a top deputy and senior advisor to the state's Attorney General, specializing in technology regulation, telecommunications, high-tech crime and cyber-security, among other subjects.
FEMA Head to Speak at ARRL Centennial Banquet
FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate, KK4INZ. (FEMA photo) |
Former Ham Magazine Editors W1RW, WZ8C, are Silent Keys
The amateur radio journalism community lost two prominent members in late February and early March.
On February 23, former QST Editor and ARRL General Manager John Huntoon, W1RW, passed away at age 97. Huntoon joined the ARRL staff in 1939, prior to the outbreak of World War II, left to serve in the Coast Guard and returned after the war. He represented the League at various international conferences in the 1940s and '50s, became Assistant General Manager in 1956 and General Manager - then the League's top staff position - in 1961. He retired from that position, whose responsibilities included being QST editor, in 1975.
CQ offers its condolences
to the families and friends of both John and Nancy.
ARRL Seeks Input on Digital Modes
The ARRL is asking members for "cogent input and thoughtful feedback" on matters relating to digital mode operation on the HF amateur bands. According to the ARRL Letter, the input - due by March 31 - will be used by the board of directors' HF Band Planning Committee to try to craft new band plans that will best allow these modes to "compatibly coexist with each other." Comments and suggestions should be e-mailed to <HF-Digital-Bandplanning@arrl.org>.
West Virginia Tower Collapse Kills 3, Cripples Repeater Network
Two radio towers in north central West Virginia collapsed on February 1 while undergoing maintenance work, killing three people, injuring two others and taking three amateur radio repeaters off the air. The ARRL Letter reports that the workers were repairing structural supports on a 300-foot tower when the structure apparently gave way, taking down a second, shorter, tower as it fell. Two of the workers on the tower were killed, along with an emergency responder on the ground, who was hit by falling debris. Two other workers were hurt.
The collapse also destroyed the antennas for three amateur radio
repeaters owned by the Stonewall Jackson Amateur Radio Association. The
repeaters were part of the "HamTalk" linked repeater system, and were
a major part of the North Central West Virginia emergency communications
network, helping the Harrison County Office of Emergency Management, FEMA and
the American Red Cross. The towers also held several commercial antennas. No
word yet on when they will be rebuilt.
Ham Radio to be Highlighted at Preparedness Summit
The ARRL reports that the importance of amateur radio in emergency response will be highlighted by a special event station in the exhibit hall of the Preparedness Summit, the nation's largest public health preparedness conference, being held in Atlanta from April 1-4. Special event station N4P will be on the air on April 2 and 3. The conference is sponsored by the National Association for County and City Health Officials, which also offered amateur radio licensing webinars in February and March, and will offer license exams at the conference on April 3.
GAREC Comes (Back) to Huntsville
The 2014 Global Amateur Radio Emergency Conference (GAREC), sponsored by the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU), returns to the United States this year. Newsline reports that the conference will take place on August 14 and 15 at the Embassy Suites hotel in Huntsville, Alabama, which is adjacent to the Von Braun Convention Center, where the Huntsville Hamfest will be held on August 16 and 17. This is the second time that GAREC has been held in conjunction with the Huntsville Hamfest, the first having been in 2007.
A Dozen New Ham Satellites in Orbit
ArduSat is a crowd-funded satellite project that allows donors to have their own experiments sent into space. |
Five cubesats operating in the ham bands were hand-launched from the
International Space Station in late February, and another seven were aboard a
rocket launched from Japan on February 27. The five cubesats deployed from the
ISS included Lithuania's first-ever satellites - LituanicaSAT-1 <https://www.facebook.com/Lituanicasat1>
and Litsat-1 <https://www.facebook.com/palydovas> - as well as a second crowd-funded
satellite built around an Arduino processor board, ArduSat-2 <http://kck.st/1kHqWAF>.
Artist's conception of the STARS-II mother/daughter satellite pair. They will be connected by a tether. (STARS-II website illustration) |
The seven Japanese satellites include STARS-II, a mother-daughter
satellite pair, which will be connected by a Kevlar® tether. Part of the
experiment will be to use the tether to gather electrons from space plasma and
deliver them to the daughter ship, thus producing an electric current without
the need for solar panels. Both companion satellites are equipped with cameras,
and will transmit photos back to earth via amateur radio frequencies. The
daughter ship's photos are supposed to include shots of the mother satellite as
the two orbit the Earth together. More info is available at <http://bit.ly/1oFhQC0>.
New Ham Station for Arecibo Observatory
The Arecibo Obseravatory - the world's largest radio- telescope (Arecibo website photo) |
CQ Mars … (Now Wait 20 Minutes)
A simulated Mars mission to be conducted on the slopes of Mauna Loa in Hawaii in late March and early April will involve ham radio. According to the ARRL, the HI-SEAS project will use amateur radio for communication with the outside world … including the same 20-minute delay one would have for real communications with Mars! For more information, including details on special event station K6B, see <http://hi-seas.org/>.
Cracker-Sized Satellites?
A "Sprite" nanosatellite - one of some 200 scheduled to be launched from the KickSat satellite. (KickSat website photo) |