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Re: 1976 and M17

 

Steve,

I applaud you for working so hard to spread the word about M17 and open-source.

My suggestion is we mainly focus on what¡¯s good about M17, open-source being a major such goodness. What we probably should avoid is communicating negative views about other DV systems. Though I have never had an explicit sales job, I have noticed over the years that really good sales people do not denigrate their competition or competitive products. They just talk up what they are offering.

And this goes for earlier modes, including analog FM. Many people enjoy that mode for its simplicity, and we may never convince them. That¡¯s ok. As has been pointed out, newer generations include many who expect the advantages of digital, and some of those understand the importance of openness.

I once took a course in Change Management, that is, selling improvement processes to people in an organization. The leader gave us all kinds of suggestions, but also pointed out that some people will never change, but they will die at some point. Change is inevitable.

Jim ¨C K6JM

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Steve Stroh N8GNJ
Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2024 1:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [M17-Users] 1976 and M17

All:

I thought I¡¯d share this with you, this M17 community of interest.

I had a long conversation with a friend on a repeater yesterday after I published Zero Retries 0164 and ¡°Why M17 Is Significant - Part 2¡±.

My friend is the owner of the repeater we were talking on, and I was mentioning how much excitement I was seeing about M17, including the debut of the CS7000 M17. He just didn¡¯t get it - he really didn¡¯t understand that the key feature of M17 is that it¡¯s open.

I tried to explain that openness of M17 is the critical feature to the newest generation of Amateur Radio Operators who are digital / Internet natives, are likely techies, and many hackers like the ones who will take Amateur Radio exams this weekend at DEFCON and will become Amateur Radio Operators whose primary interest in Amateur Radio is to hack on radio technology.

To my friend, the openness of M17 versus DMR or D-Star or SF was irrelevant considering that DMR, D-Star, and SF are well-established, and why did we ¡°need¡± another system?

I really couldn¡¯t explain it to him in a way that got through to him. He wasn¡¯t convinced, though I¡¯m not sure that he wanted to be convinced.

A few hours later, the following analogy occurred to me. I emailed a more terse version of this to him, and I¡¯ll expand this in next week¡¯s Zero Retries. You¡¯re the first to see this made public.

¡­

M17 versus the status quo of Amateur Radio digital and FM repeaters is analogous (in my mind) to the computer industry in 1976.

In 1976, mainframes and minis were doing the job satisfactorily for the computer industry. Everyone that needed and could afford a computer had one. That¡¯s analogous to the current repeater technology and the current repeater owners.

But in 1975, one year earlier, microcomputers had come on the scene. The MITS Altair was unveiled in the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. By 1976 a completely new crowd entered the ¡°computer industry¡± and were using these new (and still very imperfect, by mini and mainframe standards) microcomputers to do computing very differently than was possible with mainframes and minis.

The microcomputer folks didn¡¯t ask ¡°permission¡± from the mainframe and mini folks, and they didn¡¯t try to persuade the mainframe and mini owners that microcomputer were ¡°better¡± and they should start doing / using microcomputers.

Instead of asking permission or trying to persuade, they just started doing things their own new way with microcomputers and rapidly evolved an entirely different version of the computer industry.

A decade later, the mainframe and mini computer industry looked around and said ¡°what happened?!?!?¡± All of the energy in the computer industry had shifted to microcomputers.

¡­

In my opinion, from deep observation of M17 and trying to explain it and write about it substantively¡­

M17 in 2024 is at the ¡°computer industry circa 1976" point of inflection.

Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.

In the discussion with my friend, I pointed out that the M17 community doesn¡¯t need to persuade repeater owners, etc. that M17 is ¡°better¡± or even ¡°good enough¡± for them to consider using it or adapting their repeaters to it. M17¡¯s technology means that M17 is growing with Internet linking, hotspots, adapters like Module 17, and repeaters that have added MMDVM and M17 is just one mode among many that MMDVM enables.

While my friend¡¯s repeater mostly sits idle...

I have begun my planning to build up an MMDVM repeater (which will mostly be for M17 and hopefully MMDVM-TNC high speed data mode). I will build up, test it out in my shop (N8GNJ Labs) and eventually have ready for an opportunity to put it on the air from a good location.

I¡¯m tired of trying to persuade people that ¡°just don¡¯t want to get it¡± about newer technology like M17. For the same amount of energy and resources, I¡¯m just going to route around them.

The M17 community, worldwide, apparently feels the same. They¡¯re doing M17 because they want to use open systems.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ


Re: 1976 and M17

 

On Tue, Aug 13, 2024 at 10:30?AM K4HCK via groups.io
<cmooth@...> wrote:

Wild times. I'll never forget when the office I worked in realized we were hitting capacity on the T1 line. It was mind boggling at the time that ~12 employees could use that much bandwidth.
Just as I became aware, the University of Arkansas replaced the
previous 56k connection to MidNet with a T1. Man, tall cotton.

The university was pretty forward-thinking on networking, though. By
1991-92, they had fiber connecting all campus buildings in the steam
tunnels. FDDI ring at 100 Mbit/s. Ho-hum now, but there was no 100
Mbit/s Ethernet then, only 10. And yes, the buildings were all
10BASE2 thinnet. Except the College of Business - they were Token
Ring because "real" computers had to be (and were for them) IBM.

So, so long ago. Mounting wuarchive over NFS, watching Shuttle
launches over MBONE (or listening to Carl Malamud's talk show).
Cu-SeeMe. Then Mosaic ...



--
Peter Laws | VE[23]UWY / N5UWY | plaws0 gmail com | Travel by Train!


Re: 1976 and M17

 

Wild times. I'll never forget when the office I worked in realized we were hitting capacity on the T1 line. It was mind boggling at the time that ~12 employees could use that much bandwidth.


Re: 1976 and M17

 

I recall hosting at (a major dial-up ISO) in Seattle in 1996 on a pent 133 box running Debian.? We did that because we had the Big Pipe, a T3 (45Mb/s) feed from Sprint. Those were the days.


On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 7:12?PM Tony Langdon via <vk3jed=[email protected]> wrote:
I was an early adopter of Linux, both as a hobbyist (1995) and in commercial service as a router, firewall and web server on a handful of old PCs (1997), and I saw the Linux revolution coming.? It didn't take much to convince the boss.? I had the knowledge and hands on experience, and the price was right.? A year later, the first articles about Linux in business started coming out in the tech press.

On 12/8/24 11:53 pm, K4HCK via wrote:
For the post-minicomputer generation, the relevant genX analogy will be that of Linux vs. Windows. Linux offered the same open source freedom that M17 does today in that it was a completely accessible, modifiable, and "free" alternative to Microsoft that we could tinker with. Today, almost every server on the internet runs Linux. If the M17 future follows that path, we'll see a ubiquitous mode found on nearly every transceiver. And people won't really think about it.
?
It's exciting to me as a "techie" because it can be entirely a software interaction. The intersection of software and RF is what got me interested in the hobby, and this extends that world of freedom and possibility.?
?
People will be persuaded to invest in M17 once they can see the benefits over other modes in practical application. That will come as the early adopters continue to build on this initial success and showcase what's possible.
?
73
K4HCK
Cale


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL



--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM,?Tulalip, WA??Portland, OR, 360-474-7474


Re: 1976 and M17

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I was an early adopter of Linux, both as a hobbyist (1995) and in commercial service as a router, firewall and web server on a handful of old PCs (1997), and I saw the Linux revolution coming.? It didn't take much to convince the boss.? I had the knowledge and hands on experience, and the price was right.? A year later, the first articles about Linux in business started coming out in the tech press.

On 12/8/24 11:53 pm, K4HCK via groups.io wrote:
For the post-minicomputer generation, the relevant genX analogy will be that of Linux vs. Windows. Linux offered the same open source freedom that M17 does today in that it was a completely accessible, modifiable, and "free" alternative to Microsoft that we could tinker with. Today, almost every server on the internet runs Linux. If the M17 future follows that path, we'll see a ubiquitous mode found on nearly every transceiver. And people won't really think about it.
?
It's exciting to me as a "techie" because it can be entirely a software interaction. The intersection of software and RF is what got me interested in the hobby, and this extends that world of freedom and possibility.?
?
People will be persuaded to invest in M17 once they can see the benefits over other modes in practical application. That will come as the early adopters continue to build on this initial success and showcase what's possible.
?
73
K4HCK
Cale


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL


Re: 1976 and M17

 

Cale:

You¡¯re right in making that additional analogy and I¡¯ll use that also with full credit to you.?

Thanks,

Steve

Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 06:53 K4HCK via <cmooth=[email protected]> wrote:
For the post-minicomputer generation, the relevant genX analogy will be that of Linux vs. Windows. Linux offered the same open source freedom that M17 does today in that it was a completely accessible, modifiable, and "free" alternative to Microsoft that we could tinker with. Today, almost every server on the internet runs Linux. If the M17 future follows that path, we'll see a ubiquitous mode found on nearly every transceiver. And people won't really think about it.
?
It's exciting to me as a "techie" because it can be entirely a software interaction. The intersection of software and RF is what got me interested in the hobby, and this extends that world of freedom and possibility.?
?
People will be persuaded to invest in M17 once they can see the benefits over other modes in practical application. That will come as the early adopters continue to build on this initial success and showcase what's possible.
?
73
K4HCK
Cale


Re: 1976 and M17

 

For the post-minicomputer generation, the relevant genX analogy will be that of Linux vs. Windows. Linux offered the same open source freedom that M17 does today in that it was a completely accessible, modifiable, and "free" alternative to Microsoft that we could tinker with. Today, almost every server on the internet runs Linux. If the M17 future follows that path, we'll see a ubiquitous mode found on nearly every transceiver. And people won't really think about it.
?
It's exciting to me as a "techie" because it can be entirely a software interaction. The intersection of software and RF is what got me interested in the hobby, and this extends that world of freedom and possibility.?
?
People will be persuaded to invest in M17 once they can see the benefits over other modes in practical application. That will come as the early adopters continue to build on this initial success and showcase what's possible.
?
73
K4HCK
Cale


Re: Need some volunteer editors for Wikipedia¡¯s M17 article

 

On Sun, Aug 11, 2024 at 9:51?AM Wojciech Kaczmarski via groups.io
<w.kaczmarski@...> wrote:

M17 was never called "Mode 17".
So say you. What, did you write it or something???




Of course, you did. :-) And thank you for your work.

--
Peter Laws | VE[23]UWY / N5UWY | plaws0 gmail com | Travel by Train!


Re: M17 repeaters

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I've got to get my antenna up and update my paperwork.? M17? has been enabled for years.? The delay has been the house move a while back, still gradually putting everything back up.? The repeater is not the only casuality.? I've been off HF for years as well.

On 12/8/24 12:01 am, Wojciech Kaczmarski via groups.io wrote:
It would be great if more multi-mode DV repeater owners decided to enable M17 and update their RepeaterBook or Repeater World entries accordingly. This is a call to action - please ask your local DV repeater admins to enable the mode. Where MMDVM is used, it should be a very simple task.
?
It's a simple loop: no infrastructure -> no users -> no infrastructure -> no users -> ... Together we can break it. RepeaterBook lists 41 entries already!


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL


Re: M17 repeaters

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Many thanks for the reminder Woj.

?

I have made the repeaterbook updates for my repeater.

?

?

Walter/K5WH

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Wojciech Kaczmarski
Sent: Sunday, August 11, 2024 9:01 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [M17-Users] M17 repeaters

?

It would be great if more multi-mode DV repeater owners decided to enable M17 and update their RepeaterBook or Repeater World entries accordingly. This is a call to action - please ask your local DV repeater admins to enable the mode. Where MMDVM is used, it should be a very simple task.

?

It's a simple loop: no infrastructure -> no users -> no infrastructure -> no users -> ... Together we can break it. RepeaterBook lists 41 entries already!


Re: 1976 and M17

 

On Sat, Aug 10, 2024 at 04:10 PM, Steve Stroh N8GNJ wrote:
I¡¯m tired of trying to persuade people that ¡°just don¡¯t want to get it.¡±
I love this idea. It applies not only to M17, but to other aspects of ham radio as well. That¡¯s the attitude I took with my one-day Tech classes, and now I¡¯d guess that at least 50% of the Tech classes being offered are one-day Tech classes. I didn¡¯t¡¯ originate the idea, but I sure promoted it.
?
Damn the torpedoes. Full speed ahead.
?
73,
?
Dan KB6NU


M17 repeaters

 

It would be great if more multi-mode DV repeater owners decided to enable M17 and update their RepeaterBook or Repeater World entries accordingly. This is a call to action - please ask your local DV repeater admins to enable the mode. Where MMDVM is used, it should be a very simple task.
?
It's a simple loop: no infrastructure -> no users -> no infrastructure -> no users -> ... Together we can break it. RepeaterBook lists 41 entries already!


Re: Need some volunteer editors for Wikipedia¡¯s M17 article

 

M17 was never called "Mode 17".
?
I have slightly edited the M17 Wikipedia article. Go ahead and give it a read. There's one more table there - a DV comparison.


Re: 1976 and M17

 

Tony:

Thanks for the validation of this idea.

That M17 is open is the part that¡¯s almost entirely invisible to the vast majority of Amateur Radio. Open makes all the difference in the world to that segment of Amateur Radio that cares deeply about open standards. It¡¯s almost unexplainable to most folks.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ

Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


On Sat, Aug 10, 2024 at 13:59 Tony Langdon via <vk3jed=[email protected]> wrote:
Steve,

I've personally seen this.? I've talked to a number of people of varying ages who have kept mainly to FM, and while they've dipped their toe into the digital waters, they have been underwhelmed by what they've found - systems with restrictions on them, primarily around the vocoder.? There's a lot of people who want to do the open source thing.? Some are coders who want to play with the software itself, others simply believe in the philosophy.? I'm partly the latter, but I'm also a systems integrator, using open interfaces to combine software together into new ways, often not considered by the original authors.? Openness makes my cause much easier, as do standards (I love USRP!).? Sometimes this also means working with software developers and testing their efforts, another rewarding activity.

I've told them about M17 and they were all ears - the attraction was the openness of M17, so much so that one of these people asked me to provide a M17 bridge to a major network that he is involved with.? Interestingly, he also found Codec2 more pleasing to his ears than the *MBE family of codecs.? I find them roughly equivalent to my ears.? Interestignly, Codec2 3200 transcoded to AMBE2+ is practically indistinguishable to native AMBE2+ in audio quality when monitored on a DMR radio.

On 11/8/24 6:10 am, Steve Stroh N8GNJ via wrote:
All:

I thought I¡¯d share this with you, this M17 community of interest.

I had a long conversation with a friend on a repeater yesterday after I published Zero Retries 0164 and ¡°Why M17 Is Significant - Part 2¡±.

My friend is the owner of the repeater we were talking on, and I was mentioning how much excitement I was seeing about M17, including the debut of the CS7000 M17. He just didn¡¯t get it - he really didn¡¯t understand that the key feature of M17 is that it¡¯s open.

I tried to explain that openness of M17 is the critical feature to the newest generation of Amateur Radio Operators who are digital / Internet natives, are likely techies, and many hackers like the ones who will take Amateur Radio exams this weekend at DEFCON and will become Amateur Radio Operators whose primary interest in Amateur Radio is to hack on radio technology.

To my friend, the openness of M17 versus DMR or D-Star or SF was irrelevant considering that DMR, D-Star, and SF are well-established, and why did we ¡°need¡± another system?

I really couldn¡¯t explain it to him in a way that got through to him. He wasn¡¯t convinced, though I¡¯m not sure that he wanted to be convinced.

A few hours later, the following analogy occurred to me. I emailed a more terse version of this to him, and I¡¯ll expand this in next week¡¯s Zero Retries. You¡¯re the first to see this made public.

¡­

M17 versus the status quo of Amateur Radio digital and FM repeaters is analogous (in my mind) to the computer industry in 1976.

In 1976, mainframes and minis were doing the job satisfactorily for the computer industry. Everyone that needed and could afford a computer had one. That¡¯s analogous to the current repeater technology and the current repeater owners.

But in 1975, one year earlier, microcomputers had come on the scene. The MITS Altair was unveiled in the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. By 1976 a completely new crowd entered the ¡°computer industry¡± and were using these new (and still very imperfect, by mini and mainframe standards) microcomputers to do computing very differently than was possible with mainframes and minis.

The microcomputer folks didn¡¯t ask ¡°permission¡± from the mainframe and mini folks, and they didn¡¯t try to persuade the mainframe and mini owners that microcomputer were ¡°better¡± and they should start doing / using microcomputers.

Instead of asking permission or trying to persuade, they just started doing things their own new way?with microcomputers and rapidly evolved an entirely different version of the computer industry.

A decade later, the mainframe and mini computer industry looked around and said ¡°what happened?!?!?¡± All of the energy in the computer industry had shifted to microcomputers.

¡­

In my opinion, from deep observation of M17 and trying to explain it and write about it substantively¡­

M17 in 2024 is at the ¡°computer industry circa 1976" point of inflection.

Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.

In the discussion with my friend, I pointed out that the M17 community doesn¡¯t need?to persuade repeater owners, etc. that M17 is ¡°better¡± or even ¡°good enough¡± for them to consider using it or adapting their repeaters to it. M17¡¯s technology means that M17 is growing with Internet linking, hotspots, adapters like Module 17, and repeaters that have added MMDVM and M17 is just one mode among many that MMDVM enables.

While my friend¡¯s repeater mostly sits idle...

I have begun my planning to build up an MMDVM repeater (which will mostly be for M17 and hopefully MMDVM-TNC high speed data mode). I will build up, test it out in my shop (N8GNJ Labs) and eventually have ready for an opportunity to put it on the air from a good location.

I¡¯m tired of trying to persuade people that ¡°just don¡¯t want to get it¡± about newer technology like M17. For the same amount of energy and resources, I¡¯m just going to route around them.

The M17 community, worldwide, apparently feels the same. They¡¯re doing M17 because they want to use open systems.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ


---

Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -?
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL


Re: 1976 and M17

 

Peter:

The diversity of microcomputers IS the open part.

You could take the new microprocessors and build whatever kind of computer you wanted.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ

Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


On Sat, Aug 10, 2024 at 14:14 Peter Laws via <plaws0=[email protected]> wrote:
On Sat, Aug 10, 2024 at 4:10?PM Steve Stroh N8GNJ via
<steve.stroh=[email protected]> wrote:

> Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.

Ehhh ... Uhhh ... MITS was one of those dip-switch programmed units,
wasn't it?? Could a C64 run VIC-20 code? (I never had either but at
least they had keyboards ... they *were* keyboards ...).

Certainly there was a way to run MS-DOS code on my Amiga, c.1990, but
it required a "coprocessor card".

Even now, my Macbook won't run Windows programs (not that this sort of
thing means anything any more).

So the "Like microcomputers, M17 is open" probably needs some refinement.

I, too, like FM, but I'm also fine with moving along ... as my D-STAR
HT tuned to my hotspot connected to a reflector attests.? I wonder if
your friend said the same thing when (the few) AM repeaters went away
in favor of FM c.1970?

--
Peter Laws | VE[23]UWY / N5UWY | plaws0 gmail com | Travel by Train!






Re: 1976 and M17

 

On Sat, Aug 10, 2024 at 4:10?PM Steve Stroh N8GNJ via groups.io
<steve.stroh@...> wrote:

Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.
Ehhh ... Uhhh ... MITS was one of those dip-switch programmed units,
wasn't it? Could a C64 run VIC-20 code? (I never had either but at
least they had keyboards ... they *were* keyboards ...).

Certainly there was a way to run MS-DOS code on my Amiga, c.1990, but
it required a "coprocessor card".

Even now, my Macbook won't run Windows programs (not that this sort of
thing means anything any more).

So the "Like microcomputers, M17 is open" probably needs some refinement.

I, too, like FM, but I'm also fine with moving along ... as my D-STAR
HT tuned to my hotspot connected to a reflector attests. I wonder if
your friend said the same thing when (the few) AM repeaters went away
in favor of FM c.1970?

--
Peter Laws | VE[23]UWY / N5UWY | plaws0 gmail com | Travel by Train!


Re: 1976 and M17

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Steve,

I've personally seen this.? I've talked to a number of people of varying ages who have kept mainly to FM, and while they've dipped their toe into the digital waters, they have been underwhelmed by what they've found - systems with restrictions on them, primarily around the vocoder.? There's a lot of people who want to do the open source thing.? Some are coders who want to play with the software itself, others simply believe in the philosophy.? I'm partly the latter, but I'm also a systems integrator, using open interfaces to combine software together into new ways, often not considered by the original authors.? Openness makes my cause much easier, as do standards (I love USRP!).? Sometimes this also means working with software developers and testing their efforts, another rewarding activity.

I've told them about M17 and they were all ears - the attraction was the openness of M17, so much so that one of these people asked me to provide a M17 bridge to a major network that he is involved with.? Interestingly, he also found Codec2 more pleasing to his ears than the *MBE family of codecs.? I find them roughly equivalent to my ears.? Interestignly, Codec2 3200 transcoded to AMBE2+ is practically indistinguishable to native AMBE2+ in audio quality when monitored on a DMR radio.

On 11/8/24 6:10 am, Steve Stroh N8GNJ via groups.io wrote:
All:

I thought I¡¯d share this with you, this M17 community of interest.

I had a long conversation with a friend on a repeater yesterday after I published Zero Retries 0164 and ¡°Why M17 Is Significant - Part 2¡±.

My friend is the owner of the repeater we were talking on, and I was mentioning how much excitement I was seeing about M17, including the debut of the CS7000 M17. He just didn¡¯t get it - he really didn¡¯t understand that the key feature of M17 is that it¡¯s open.

I tried to explain that openness of M17 is the critical feature to the newest generation of Amateur Radio Operators who are digital / Internet natives, are likely techies, and many hackers like the ones who will take Amateur Radio exams this weekend at DEFCON and will become Amateur Radio Operators whose primary interest in Amateur Radio is to hack on radio technology.

To my friend, the openness of M17 versus DMR or D-Star or SF was irrelevant considering that DMR, D-Star, and SF are well-established, and why did we ¡°need¡± another system?

I really couldn¡¯t explain it to him in a way that got through to him. He wasn¡¯t convinced, though I¡¯m not sure that he wanted to be convinced.

A few hours later, the following analogy occurred to me. I emailed a more terse version of this to him, and I¡¯ll expand this in next week¡¯s Zero Retries. You¡¯re the first to see this made public.

¡­

M17 versus the status quo of Amateur Radio digital and FM repeaters is analogous (in my mind) to the computer industry in 1976.

In 1976, mainframes and minis were doing the job satisfactorily for the computer industry. Everyone that needed and could afford a computer had one. That¡¯s analogous to the current repeater technology and the current repeater owners.

But in 1975, one year earlier, microcomputers had come on the scene. The MITS Altair was unveiled in the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. By 1976 a completely new crowd entered the ¡°computer industry¡± and were using these new (and still very imperfect, by mini and mainframe standards) microcomputers to do computing very differently than was possible with mainframes and minis.

The microcomputer folks didn¡¯t ask ¡°permission¡± from the mainframe and mini folks, and they didn¡¯t try to persuade the mainframe and mini owners that microcomputer were ¡°better¡± and they should start doing / using microcomputers.

Instead of asking permission or trying to persuade, they just started doing things their own new way?with microcomputers and rapidly evolved an entirely different version of the computer industry.

A decade later, the mainframe and mini computer industry looked around and said ¡°what happened?!?!?¡± All of the energy in the computer industry had shifted to microcomputers.

¡­

In my opinion, from deep observation of M17 and trying to explain it and write about it substantively¡­

M17 in 2024 is at the ¡°computer industry circa 1976" point of inflection.

Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.

In the discussion with my friend, I pointed out that the M17 community doesn¡¯t need?to persuade repeater owners, etc. that M17 is ¡°better¡± or even ¡°good enough¡± for them to consider using it or adapting their repeaters to it. M17¡¯s technology means that M17 is growing with Internet linking, hotspots, adapters like Module 17, and repeaters that have added MMDVM and M17 is just one mode among many that MMDVM enables.

While my friend¡¯s repeater mostly sits idle...

I have begun my planning to build up an MMDVM repeater (which will mostly be for M17 and hopefully MMDVM-TNC high speed data mode). I will build up, test it out in my shop (N8GNJ Labs) and eventually have ready for an opportunity to put it on the air from a good location.

I¡¯m tired of trying to persuade people that ¡°just don¡¯t want to get it¡± about newer technology like M17. For the same amount of energy and resources, I¡¯m just going to route around them.

The M17 community, worldwide, apparently feels the same. They¡¯re doing M17 because they want to use open systems.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ


---

Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -?
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


-- 
73 de Tony VK3JED/VK3IRL


1976 and M17

 

All:

I thought I¡¯d share this with you, this M17 community of interest.

I had a long conversation with a friend on a repeater yesterday after I published Zero Retries 0164 and ¡°Why M17 Is Significant - Part 2¡±.

My friend is the owner of the repeater we were talking on, and I was mentioning how much excitement I was seeing about M17, including the debut of the CS7000 M17. He just didn¡¯t get it - he really didn¡¯t understand that the key feature of M17 is that it¡¯s open.

I tried to explain that openness of M17 is the critical feature to the newest generation of Amateur Radio Operators who are digital / Internet natives, are likely techies, and many hackers like the ones who will take Amateur Radio exams this weekend at DEFCON and will become Amateur Radio Operators whose primary interest in Amateur Radio is to hack on radio technology.

To my friend, the openness of M17 versus DMR or D-Star or SF was irrelevant considering that DMR, D-Star, and SF are well-established, and why did we ¡°need¡± another system?

I really couldn¡¯t explain it to him in a way that got through to him. He wasn¡¯t convinced, though I¡¯m not sure that he wanted to be convinced.

A few hours later, the following analogy occurred to me. I emailed a more terse version of this to him, and I¡¯ll expand this in next week¡¯s Zero Retries. You¡¯re the first to see this made public.

¡­

M17 versus the status quo of Amateur Radio digital and FM repeaters is analogous (in my mind) to the computer industry in 1976.

In 1976, mainframes and minis were doing the job satisfactorily for the computer industry. Everyone that needed and could afford a computer had one. That¡¯s analogous to the current repeater technology and the current repeater owners.

But in 1975, one year earlier, microcomputers had come on the scene. The MITS Altair was unveiled in the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics magazine. By 1976 a completely new crowd entered the ¡°computer industry¡± and were using these new (and still very imperfect, by mini and mainframe standards) microcomputers to do computing very differently than was possible with mainframes and minis.

The microcomputer folks didn¡¯t ask ¡°permission¡± from the mainframe and mini folks, and they didn¡¯t try to persuade the mainframe and mini owners that microcomputer were ¡°better¡± and they should start doing / using microcomputers.

Instead of asking permission or trying to persuade, they just started doing things their own new way?with microcomputers and rapidly evolved an entirely different version of the computer industry.

A decade later, the mainframe and mini computer industry looked around and said ¡°what happened?!?!?¡± All of the energy in the computer industry had shifted to microcomputers.

¡­

In my opinion, from deep observation of M17 and trying to explain it and write about it substantively¡­

M17 in 2024 is at the ¡°computer industry circa 1976" point of inflection.

Like microcomputers, M17 is open. Thus there¡¯s no structural issue that prevents M17 from rapidly growing and evolving.

In the discussion with my friend, I pointed out that the M17 community doesn¡¯t need?to persuade repeater owners, etc. that M17 is ¡°better¡± or even ¡°good enough¡± for them to consider using it or adapting their repeaters to it. M17¡¯s technology means that M17 is growing with Internet linking, hotspots, adapters like Module 17, and repeaters that have added MMDVM and M17 is just one mode among many that MMDVM enables.

While my friend¡¯s repeater mostly sits idle...

I have begun my planning to build up an MMDVM repeater (which will mostly be for M17 and hopefully MMDVM-TNC high speed data mode). I will build up, test it out in my shop (N8GNJ Labs) and eventually have ready for an opportunity to put it on the air from a good location.

I¡¯m tired of trying to persuade people that ¡°just don¡¯t want to get it¡± about newer technology like M17. For the same amount of energy and resources, I¡¯m just going to route around them.

The M17 community, worldwide, apparently feels the same. They¡¯re doing M17 because they want to use open systems.

Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ


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Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -?
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!


Re: m17-users is now on paid tier

 

Added info on the CS7000 to the wikipedia entry.?

Damn,took almost 90 min for a 2 line entry. Glad I'm retired.


m17-users is now on paid tier

 

If there were friends that were wanting to join this email list, that¡¯s now possible as the current paid tier is now good up to 500 subscribers.

And...

Zero Retries 0164 has published with the l o n g article Why M17 Is Significant - Part 2 -?


Thanks,

Steve N8GNJ

--
Steve Stroh N8GNJ (he / him / his)
Editor
Zero Retries Newsletter -
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!