<div>Bob.... if people here in a America don't know distance and don't know what a mile is, that is WONDERFUL. Ve kan now svitch to kilometers. Ze drem haz kom tvue. </div>
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<div>lol.</div>
<div><br clear="all">Wes<br>---<br>Wondering why the heck we are still using imperial units.<br><br></div>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 16:33, Bob Bruninga <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:bruninga@usna.edu">bruninga@usna.edu</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote style="BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; PADDING-LEFT: 1ex" class="gmail_quote">
<div class="im">> Without a mapping application,<br>> APRS is virtually useless.<br><br></div>Well, that sentiment is what pervades Amateur Radio and is why we are still<br>just a small minority of map voyeurs instead of communicators. The APRS<br>
channel cannot provide the map tracking continuity that map tracking voyeurs<br>expect. Promoting APRS as just a tracking system is a self-defeating dead<br>end. (and is why we are stuck where we are today with hardly anyone<br>
communicating while mobile anymore because all the repeaters are PL'ed and<br>there is no easy on-the-fly way to make a contact.<br><br>Of course, maps are GREAT to see where all the net participants are<br>currently located in the VHF RF domain and special events and all kinds of<br>
uses,... But to fulfill the basic needs of a single national network<br>channel for establishing immediate communications between users, the map is<br>not as important as some think. I assume that most tactical aware hams can<br>
visualize where someone reported as 3.5 miles NW is located relative to the<br>area. Same goes if they are 35 miles west, or wherever.<br><br>But in my non-ham radio dealings, I guess I have seen a whole lot of folks<br>
who are just basically clueless about spatial awareness and couldn't tell<br>someone which way is north, or how to get to the nearest Radio shack without<br>a map. Asked how far away the Home Depot is, I am amazed that many people<br>
(who know where it is) cannot estimate the distance even within a factor of<br>2! Is it a mile away? Is it 10 miles away? They just look stunned as if<br>they have never heard of a "mile" as a unit of distance. "Just go that way<br>
to the McDonalds and turn left."<br><br>My earlier list of priorities for implementing APRS was in no way meant to<br>diminish the value of maps. But it was to show that the most important and<br>easiest aspects of APRS as a communications and information distribution<br>
network do not necessarily require maps.<br><br>Get the communications built-in first, then add the maps as the icing on the<br>cake.<br><br>Bob, Wb4APR<br>
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