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- 6/16/10 - Al K7IEY... Silent Key
- 4/14/09 - Let's do The Stanwood/Camino Island Hamfest!
- 10/16/09 - 900MHz back up on Lyman Hill!
- 11/28/09 - VHFDX.NET Propagation Suspended
- 4/12/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County site gets a makeover
- 4/16/09- Looking Global with Twitter
- 4/19/09 - Linuxfest Northwest
- 4/28/09 - Attention Oregon State Amateur radio Operators - HB2377
- 4/4/09 - A change in look and feel.... The new Site
- 5/1/09 - We are on a New Server!
- 5/15/09 - New Docs Show FCC Glossed Over BPL Flaws
- 5/16/09 - APRS Map Pages Update
- 5/17/09 - The New KG7HQ Site Calendar
- 5/26/09 - Coming soon!! "The Northwest’s Largest Ham Convention"
- 5/31/09 - Some Additions added to the Site.
- 5/7/09 - SB649: Government Audit of Frequency Spectrum
- 6/11/09 - 2009 ARRL Field Day Locator
- 6/11/09 - Live APRS Map Pages Updated
- 6/19/09 - Walter Cronkite Very Ill
- 6/20/09 - Skagit County Hams Starting a New Net
- 6/23/09 - A Cool Website for locating Hardware Pin Outs!
- 6/23/09 - SCARC Field Day 2009
- 7/11/09 - Having Troubles Reading This Site? Try a Different Theme!
- 7/2/09 - Island County Has Changed Emcomm Leadership.
- 7/2/09 - US sets final emergency responder wireless pilot
- 7/4/09 - The Latest on the 145.190/R Antenna Replacement Dates
- 7/6/09 - D-STAR Worldwide Contest
- 8/10/09 - SEDRO Digipeater Getting a Facelift.
- 8/11/09 - Washington State DNR Site Repeater Questions
- 8/26/09 - New radios announced at JAIA (Japan)
- 9/20/09 - 220MHz is Looking Better in Western Washington
- 4/14/2013 - WebSite Clean-Up
- 9/7/10 - AA7AT, Murray Goddard... SK
- Articles
- 1/17/2013 - Washington State Senate Bill 5000
- 1/8/10 - How Secure are the Amateur Radio Allocations?
- 11/7/09 - In Memory of KD7NM (Robert Donnell)
- 12/13/09 - Another year draws to a close
- 12/23/09 - Cellphone Ban in British Columbia, CA
- 12/30/09 - Travelling with Amateur Radio
- 2009 Summer Digital Conference
- 3/26/10 - Local Ham Getting Involved
- 3/26/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County make it in the news...
- 4/18/11 - Richard (N7RIG) Caught in the Wild
- 4/2/10 - ARRL, American Red Cross, MOU - A Positive Step Forward
- 4/21/09 - Lastest Information on the N7GDE/R (145.190)
- 4/24/09 - Oh Know! We are in the dark!
- 4/25/10 - Wetnet visits Linuxfest Northwest
- 4/4/09 - Communicating: A Dead Art Within Amateur Radio
- 5/10/09 - Is D-Star Dying a Slow Death?
- 5/20/09 - Amateur Radio Clubs: Improper etiquette of asking for professional advice
- 5/21/11 - Radio Shack wants our input???
- 5/23/09 - More Earthquake Potential? Emergency Preparedness.
- 5/29/09 - Troposhperic Ducting?
- 5/8/09 - Field Day Grilling Option
- 6/15/09 - 145.190/R (N7GDE) Update
- 6/16/09 - United States Amateur Radio Numbers on the Rise
- 6/21/09 - When Personalities Get Invovled... Has This Happened in Your Club?
- 6/25/09 - Solar LED Cap
- 7/10/09 - Traveling into a new area? Visit a local APRS Map.
- 7/10/11 - SalmonCon 2011
- 7/18/10 - CQWW VHF... A lot of fun and Great PR!
- 7/21/09 - Echos of Apollo 40th anniversary of Apollo 11
- 7/21/09 - Goodbye Walter
- 7/22/09 - Mountaintopping Beginnings
- 7/3/10 - Android and Amateur Radio
- 7/31/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County Picnic 2010
- 8/13/09 - Verizon.net changes and The Evolution E-mail Client
- 8/27/10 - Echolink on the Android
- Senate Bill 5000 - Update January 18, 2013
- Consumer Alerts
- 1/14/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 1/16/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 1/19/11 - Schneider Electric Recalls Xantrex GT Series Grid Tie Solar Inverters Due to Injury Hazard
- 1/28/10 - FCC-Consumer News
- 1/8/10 - Acer Recalls Notebook Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 10/18/10 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 10/21/11 - Horizon Hobby Recalls Losi NiMH Battery Charger Due to Possible Burn and Fire Hazards
- 10/24/09 - Coby Electronics Recalls Rechargeable Batteries Sold with Portable DVD/CD/MP3 Players Due to Fire Hazard
- 10/29/09 - Sony Recalls Computer AC Adapters Due to Shock Hazard
- 11/14/2012 - Powermate Generators Recall to Repair by Pramac America Due to Fire Hazard; Sold Exclusively at Home Depot
- 11/14/2012 - Nielsen-Kellerman Recalls Microphones Due to Electric Shock, Burn Hazards
- 11/15/2012 - American Honda Recalls Portable Generators Due to Fire and Burn Hazards
- 11/24/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 11/30/11 - Mophie Recalls iPod Touch Rechargeable External Battery Case Due to Burn Hazard
- 11/30/11 - Rocketfish Battery Case for iPhone 3G/3GS Recalled by Best Buy Due to Fire Hazard
- 11/5/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 2/13/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 3/11/10 - Noncontact Electrical Tester Recalled by Fluke Due to Shock or Burn Hazard
- 3/11/2011 - Sanus Elements Surge Protectors Recalled by Milestone AV Technologies Due to Shock Hazard
- 4/1/10 - Howard Berger Recalls Extension Cords and Power Strips Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/1/10 - Comarco Recalls Power Adapters for Laptops Due to Burn Hazard
- 5/11/2011 - Telstar Recalls Energy-Saving Light Bulbs Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/14/09 - HP Recalls Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/15/09 - Digital Clamp Meters Recalled by Fluke Due to Shock Hazard
- 5/20/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 5/22/10 - HP Expands Recall of Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/28/11 - HP Expands Recall of Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 6/17/09 - Wagner Spray Tech Recalls Heat Guns Due to Fire and Burn Hazards
- 7/1/10 - Sony Recalls VAIO Laptop Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 7/27/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 8/11/09 - Wii(tm) Battery Recharge Stations Recalled by Griffin International Due to Burn and Fire Hazards
- 8/13/08 - Homelite, Husky and Black Max Generators Recalled Due to Fire Hazard
- 8/19/10 - Electrical Wire Recalled by Cerro Wire due to Fire Hazard
- 8/21/09 - Amplifiers Recalled by Krell Industries Recalled Due to Fire Hazard
- 8/21/09 - DVD Players Recalled by Wal-Mart Due to Fire Hazard
- 9/1/2010 - 32-Inch Sharp LCD-TVs Recalled Due to Risk of Injury
- 9/2/09 - Wal-Mart Announces Recall Expansion of Durabrand DVD Players Due to Fire Hazard
- 9/4/10 - Toshiba Recalls T Series Notebook Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 4/3/09 - Radio Shack Recall of Switches
- Web Site Announcements
- Announcements
- KG7HQ's Digital Activity Page
- Ionospheric Propagation Maps
- Links Page
- Live APRS Maps
- K7IP's Projects
- Photo Albums
- 2009 ARRL Northwest Convention, Seaside, Oregon
- 2010 Linuxfest Northwest
- CQWW VHF 2010
- Field Day - 2009 (Skagit County Style)
- KP4AO EME Event
- Memories in Time... Bob Donnell (KD7NM) SK
- PSK-31... It's for the Birds!!!
- RASC Picnic 2010
- Standwood-Camino Island ARC Swap Meet 2010
- Stanwood/Camino Island Hamfest 2009
- Yaesu FT-100 Installation into a 1996 Blazer
Slashdot
Canadian Cellphone Users May Get Justice Over Phantom Charges
An anonymous reader writes "For years, Bell Mobility customers in northern Canada were charged 75 cents a month for 911 emergency service. The problem is that cellphone users outside Whitehorse, Yukon, don't have access to 911 service. The Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories ruled against Bell this week, following a class action lawsuit which challenged the phantom cellphone 911 billings. Subject to a possible final appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, Bell will likely owe 30,000 northern cellphone subscribers some bucks."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Wired Writer Imagines Google Island
theodp writes "The last thing Wired's Mat Honan remembered before awaking on the self-driving boat that dropped him on the island was sitting through a four-hour Google I/O keynote in Moscone Center and hearing Google CEO Larry Page promote a vision of a utopia where society could be free to innovate and experiment, unencumbered by government regulations or social norms. 'Welcome to Google Island,' a naked-save-for-a-pair-of-eyeglasses Larry Page tells Honan. 'As soon as you hit Google's territorial waters, you came under our jurisdiction, our terms of service. Our laws — or lack thereof — apply here. By boarding our self-driving boat you granted us the right to all feedback you provide during your journey. This includes the chemical composition of your sweat. Remember when I said at I/O that maybe we should set aside some small part of the world where people could experiment freely and examine the effects? I wasn't speaking theoretically. This place exists. We built it.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Syrian Electronic Army Hits Financial Times Sites, Feeds
puddingebola writes with an excerpt from the New York Times: "The Web site and several Twitter accounts belonging to The Financial Times were hacked on Friday by the Syrian Electronic Army in a continuing campaign that has aimed at an array of media outlets ranging from The Associated Press to the parody site The Onion, according to a claim by the so-called army. The Syrian Electronic Army said it seized control of several F.T. Twitter accounts and amended a number of the site's blog posts with the headline 'Hacked by Syrian Electronic Army.' Hackers used their access to the F.T.'s Twitter feed to post messages, including one that said, 'Syrian Electronic Army Was Here,' and another that linked to a YouTube video of an execution. Both messages were quickly removed.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Arduino Branches Out, With a Plug-and-Program Robot
mikejuk writes "The new Arduino robot looks a bit like a robot vacuum cleaner, but it has a lot more going for it and it certainly doesn't suck — well not unless you add an air pump to it. As always, the Arduino Robot is completely open source and comes as an easy to assemble kit involving no soldering, just some plugging in of components. It consists of two circular boards, 19cm in diameter, each with its own Arduino controller. They fit together to create a stack about 10cm tall. The bottom board has two wheels and motors which allow it to move in any direction. The top board contains lots of sensors and a central display. The two communicate via a serial connection. There is also a lot of space for expansion. There is a new library which can be downloaded to help write programs for this fairly sophisticated robot. There is only one big problem with the Arduino robot — you can't buy one at the moment. If you really can't wait, until early July when they should start shipping from the Arduino shop and from distributors, then you will have to get to the Maker Faire San Mateo (May 17-19) where they are being demonstrated and sold."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
After Kickstarter Record, Pebble Smartwatch Lands $15M From VCs
LeadSongDog writes "The Globe and Mail is reporting that the 'Pebble' smartwatch has matched the $15M record for Kickstarter funding after initially being panned by the VC crowd." One advantage that the Pebble has over rumored watches from big names like Google and Apple is existing.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Electronics-Loving 'Crazy Ants' Invading Southern US
From an article at the Houston Chronicle (not The Onion) comes a report of concern to anyone in a warm climate with, well, electronics. From the article: "According to researchers at The University of Texas at Austin, invasive 'crazy ants' are slowly displacing fire ants in the southeastern United States. These 'Tawny Crazy Ants' have a peculiar predilection toward electronics as well. 'They nest in electronics and create short circuits, as they create a contact bridge between two points when they get electrocuted they release an alarm pheromone,' says UT research assistant Edward LeBrun. 'The other ants are attracted to the chemicals that other ants give off,' he adds. At this point, more ants arrive and create a larger nest." The L.A. Times also has a report, which says "Thus far, the crazy ants are not falling for the traditional poisons used to eliminate fire ant mounds. And when local mounds are destroyed manually, they are quickly regenerated. 'They don't sting like fire ants do, but aside from that they are much bigger pests,' LeBrun said. 'There are videos on YouTube of people sweeping out dustpans full of these ants from their bathroom. You have to call pest control operators every three or four months just to keep the infestation under control. It's very expensive.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Intel Rolls Out "Beacon Mountain" Android Dev Platform For Atom
MojoKid writes "In an effort to coax developers to begin taking Atom seriously as an Android platform, Intel has just released a complete suite of tools that should help ease them into things — especially since it can be used for ARM development as well. It's called Beacon Mountain, named after the highest peak outside of Beacon, New York. As you'd expect, Beacon Mountain supports Jelly Bean (4.2) development, and with this suite, you're provided with a collection of important Intel tools: Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager, Integrated Performance Primitives, Graphics and System Performance Analyzers, Threaded Building Blocks and Software Manager. In addition, Android SDK and NDK, Eclipse and Cygwin third-party tools are included to complete the package."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Intel Rolls Out "Beacon Mountain" Android Dev Platform For Atom
MojoKid writes "In an effort to coax developers to begin taking Atom seriously as an Android platform, Intel has just released a complete suite of tools that should help ease them into things — especially since it can be used for ARM development as well. It's called Beacon Mountain, named after the highest peak outside of Beacon, New York. As you'd expect, Beacon Mountain supports Jelly Bean (4.2) development, and with this suite, you're provided with a collection of important Intel tools: Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager, Integrated Performance Primitives, Graphics and System Performance Analyzers, Threaded Building Blocks and Software Manager. In addition, Android SDK and NDK, Eclipse and Cygwin third-party tools are included to complete the package."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Intel Rolls Out "Beacon Mountain" Android Dev Platform For Atom
MojoKid writes "In an effort to coax developers to begin taking Atom seriously as an Android platform, Intel has just released a complete suite of tools that should help ease them into things — especially since it can be used for ARM development as well. It's called Beacon Mountain, named after the highest peak outside of Beacon, New York. As you'd expect, Beacon Mountain supports Jelly Bean (4.2) development, and with this suite, you're provided with a collection of important Intel tools: Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager, Integrated Performance Primitives, Graphics and System Performance Analyzers, Threaded Building Blocks and Software Manager. In addition, Android SDK and NDK, Eclipse and Cygwin third-party tools are included to complete the package."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Intel Rolls Out "Beacon Mountain" Android Dev Platform For Atom
MojoKid writes "In an effort to coax developers to begin taking Atom seriously as an Android platform, Intel has just released a complete suite of tools that should help ease them into things — especially since it can be used for ARM development as well. It's called Beacon Mountain, named after the highest peak outside of Beacon, New York. As you'd expect, Beacon Mountain supports Jelly Bean (4.2) development, and with this suite, you're provided with a collection of important Intel tools: Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager, Integrated Performance Primitives, Graphics and System Performance Analyzers, Threaded Building Blocks and Software Manager. In addition, Android SDK and NDK, Eclipse and Cygwin third-party tools are included to complete the package."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Fed. Appeals Court Says Police Need Warrant to Search Phone
An anonymous reader writes "In a decision that's almost certainly going to result in this issue heading up to the Supreme Court, the Federal 1st Circuit Court of Appeals [Friday] ruled that police can't search your phone when they arrest you without a warrant. That's contrary to most courts' previous findings in these kinds of cases where judges have allowed warrantless searches through cell phones." (But in line with the recently mentioned decision in Florida, and seemingly with common sense.)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
UK Consumers Reporting Contactless Payment Errors
leathered writes "The BBC reports that some customers of UK retailer Marks and Spencer have reported that the store's contactless payment terminals have debited their cards despite being in their bags or pockets, sometimes paying twice when they have used another payment method. The cards are supposed to work only when the card comes within 4cm of the terminal. Customers of fast-food chain Pret a Manger have been reporting similar problems, and in both cases cited the customers weren't even aware they had been issued with NFC-enabled cards by their bank."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
FBI Considers CALEA II: Mandatory Wiretapping On Every Device
Techmeology writes "In response to declining utility of CALEA mandated wiretapping backdoors due to more widespread use of cryptography, the FBI is considering a revamped version that would mandate wiretapping facilities in end users' computers and software. Critics have argued that this would be bad for security (PDF), as such systems must be more complex and thus harder to secure. CALEA has also enabled criminals to wiretap conversations by hacking the infrastructure used by the authorities. I wonder how this could ever be implemented in FOSS."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Bloomberg To HS Grads: Be a Plumber
An anonymous reader writes "This being college graduation season, the insights provided by commencement speakers should be familiar by now: find work in a field you're passionate about, don't underestimate your own abilities, aim high, learn to communicate and collaborate with others, give something back to your community. Billionaire Mike Bloomberg, whose current job is Mayor of New York City, evidently decided to break the mold by advising less academically adept youngsters to consider a career in plumbing. High wages, constant demand, no offshore competition. 'Compare a plumber to going to Harvard College — being a plumber, actually for the average person, probably would be a better deal'. Ouch! And hey, like a lawyer, a plumber can always dabble in politics."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Of 1000 Americans Polled, Most Would Ban Home Printing of Guns
An anonymous reader writes "In results that may signal some discomfort with the enormous DIY promise of 3D printing and similar home-manufacturing technologies, a new Reason-Rupe poll finds that an otherwise gun control-weary American public thinks owners of 3D printers ought not be allowed to make their own guns or gun parts. Of course, implementing such a restrictive policy might be tad more difficult than measuring popular preferences." This poll is of only 1000 people, though; your mileage may vary.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Happy Culture Freedom Day!
Blug_fred writes "For the second edition, today is the time to celebrate Culture Freedom Day. While not as popular as HFD or SFD, celebrating Free Culture involves finding Free Culture artists, inviting them to your place and having them perform, display or talk about what their creation(s). Of course you can always simply project a couple of Free Culture movies and launch a discussion about their business models. Either way you can find all the happening for today here on the map and we sincerely hope there will be something of interest near you."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
RPiCluster: Another Raspberry Pi Cluster, With Neat Tricks
New submitter TheJish writes "The RPiCluster is a 33-node Beowulf cluster built using Raspberry Pis (RPis). The RPiCluster is a little side project I worked on over the last couple months as part of my dissertation work at Boise State University. I had need of a cluster to run a distributed simulator I've been developing. The RPiCluster is the result. I've written an informal document on why I built the RPiCluster, how it was built, and how it performs as compared to other platforms. I also put together a YouTube video of it running an MPI parallel program I created to demo the RGB LEDs installed on each node as part of the build. While there have certainly been larger RPi clusters put together recently, I figured the Slashdot community might be interested in this build as I believe it is a novel approach to the rack mounting and power management of RPis."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
NASA Meteoroid-Spotting Program Captures Brightest-Yet Moon Impact
From a NASA press release published Friday: "For the past 8 years, NASA astronomers have been monitoring the Moon for signs of explosions caused by meteoroids hitting the lunar surface. 'Lunar meteor showers' have turned out to be more common than anyone expected, with hundreds of detectable impacts occurring every year. They've just seen the biggest explosion in the history of the program." Watch the flash for yourself.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
NASA Meteoroid-Spotting Program Captures Brightest-Yet Moon Impact
From a NASA press release published Friday: "For the past 8 years, NASA astronomers have been monitoring the Moon for signs of explosions caused by meteoroids hitting the lunar surface. 'Lunar meteor showers' have turned out to be more common than anyone expected, with hundreds of detectable impacts occurring every year. They've just seen the biggest explosion in the history of the program." Watch the flash for yourself.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
NASA Meteoroid-Spotting Program Captures Brightest-Yet Moon Impact
From a NASA press release published Friday: "For the past 8 years, NASA astronomers have been monitoring the Moon for signs of explosions caused by meteoroids hitting the lunar surface. 'Lunar meteor showers' have turned out to be more common than anyone expected, with hundreds of detectable impacts occurring every year. They've just seen the biggest explosion in the history of the program." Watch the flash for yourself.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
