Sunday, August 18, 2013

Tecsun S2000

Tecsun S2000

Tecsun S2000 F

Tecsun S2000 Carton 

Tecsun S2000 Side

Tecsun S2000 Judge it?

Tecsun S2000 functions

Tecsun S2000 tuners

Tecsun S2000 tuners

Tecsun S2000 see through

Tecsun S2000 units

Tecsun S2000 units

Tecsun Factory

Tecsun QC

Tecsun QC

Tecsun QC

Tecsun QC

Tecsun QC

Tecsun QC with MW antenna

Tecsun S2000

Tecsun S2000 Zoom it

Tecsun S2000 world band coverage


 





Thursday, August 15, 2013

AMARC salutes the First Tunisian Women Radio

Tunisia, August 13th, 2013. The World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC), salutes Radio Femme, launched this August 13 in the 102,3 FM frequency in Tunis. It is for the National Tunisian Women's Day that the Association Women in Media announced the beginning of the first Tunisian radio exclusively dedicated to Women.
This radio Station started broadcast at the historical date of August 13th, date of the promulgation of the Code du statut personnel (CSP) the only one to exist in the Arab World, 57 years ago, in 1961.
The Women's radio will be animated by women and will seek to promote Women Universal Rights, gender equality and Tunisian Women.

AMARC Global network of community radio broadcasters associate themselves in solidarity with the artisans of Radio FEMME as well to the salutations coming from "Syndicat Tunisien des Radios Libres" and other Media actors in Tunisia. We expect that all components of civil society and particularly women organizations will participate in the success of this very important project that will contribute to reinforce Freedom of Expression and democracy building in Tunisia.
Through service to members, networking and project implementation, the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC), brings together a network of more than 4,000 community radios, Federations and community media stakeholders in more than 130 countries. The main global impact of AMARC since its creation in 1983, has been to accompany and support the establishment of a worldwide community radio sector that has democratized the media sector. AMARC advocates for the right to communicate at the international, national, local and neighbourhood levels and defends and promotes the interests of the community radio movement through solidarity, networking and cooperation.
  
_______________________________________________
Via http://lists.amarc.org/mailman/listinfo/amarc-info-en


Wavescan NWS233

* Theme - 00:00
            "Birthday Serenade" - Willi Glahe
 
* Opening Announcement - 00:14
            Welcome to "Wavescan", international DX program from Adventist World Radio
            Researched and written in Indianapolis, produced in studios of shortwave WRMI
            Program outline
                        1. NASB Report: AWR Dr. Dowell Chow, AWR Languages & Services
                        2. More than 100 Years Ago: Wireless at War
                                    The Story of the World's 1st Wireless Reports from a War Zone
                        3. Philippine DX Report
 
* NASB Report - 01:00
            AWR Dr. Dowell Chow, AWR Languages & Services
 
* Program Announcement - 15:45
            Allen Graham
 
* More than 100 Years Ago: Wireless at War - 16:33
                        The Story of the World's 1st Wireless Reports from a War Zone
            For the first time in the history of electrical communication, wireless was used for the transmission of war news from the fighting areas to newspaper offices in Europe & the United States.  The year was 1904, and this is what happened.  
            Back towards the end of the year 1903, it so happened that the wireless experimenter Lee de Forest was in Ireland and he was presenting test demonstrations of his wireless equipment to interested observers at a location near the city of Dublin.  War was in the offing over in the Far East, belligerent countries were making preparation, and newspapers were preparing to give good coverage.
            The London Times contracted with Captain Lionel James to go to the Far East as a news reporter, and Captain James contracted with Lee de Forest to set up two wireless stations, one on land and another aboard ship.  Two of Lee de Forest's employees in his New York office were given 24 hours to get ready to travel to the Far East.  A total of 4 tons of wireless equipment was quickly assembled and additional equipment was brought in to New York by a wireless operator from England.   
            On January 17, 1904, Mr. H. J. Brown now in his 30s, and 21 year old H. E. Ahearn, together with all of their assembled wireless equipment, left New York by train for Vancouver in British Colombia,  Canada.  At this western Canadian seaport, they boarded the ship "Empress of Japan", owned and operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway Co, and bound for the western Pacific.
            The wireless party arrived in Yokohama Japan on February 9, and they immediately boarded another seagoing vessel, the "Empress of China", operated by Canadian Pacific Steamships and bound for Shanghai on the edge of China.  Here they took over a Chinese coastal vessel, the "Haimun" and loaded all of their equipment aboard for the journey north to the disputed waters.
            On board the good ship "Haimun" and while it was traveling northwards, one set of wireless equipment was installed for usage, together with two wireless masts, one American Oregon pine and the other Chinese bamboo.  However, both masts were felled in the rough seas, and so the Oregon pine mast at 75 feet was tied to one of the ship's masts.
            In due course, the "Haimun" arrived at an isolated British colony, known in those days as Wei Hai Wei, which was located on the island of Liao Kung Tun.  Here it was that the 21 year old radio operator, H. E. Ahearn was offloaded together with the other set of wireless equipment which he installed on a cliff overlooking the ocean.  He erected the 180 ft bamboo wireless mast on top of the 350 ft high cliff.
            It took Ahearn 3 weeks to get the station ready for service, with electric power from their own kerosene engine.  The location was just 1½ miles from a nearby cable station, operated by the Eastern Extension Telegraph & Cable Co.
            In the meantime, the ship "Haimun"left the area, and steamed towards the area of conflict between Russia & Japan.
            On March 15, 1904, war correspondent Lionel James sent his first new dispatch from the "Haimun" and this was tapped out in standard Morse Code by the operator H. J. Brown.  This message was picked up by Ahearn in his little hut at the land based wireless station and transcribed into regular English. 
            A Chinese messenger took the written message to the nearby cable station and in less than quarter of an hour this war report was again tapped out in Morse Code and this time it was sent out over the long wire & cable systems to distant England & America for publication in the London Times and the New York Times.  This then, was the first wireless message from a news correspondent in a war zone.
            The content of this historic first wireless message from a war corespondent told of the Japanese landing at Chi-nam-Pho on the Korean peninsula when 25,000 troops and 10,000 horses went ashore.  
            Three weeks later, the Russian navy vessel "Bayan" arrested the movement of the "Haimun" wireless ship and they sent a raiding party aboard the small Chinese steamer.  One of the personnel on board the "Haimun" was a Japanese censor who vetted every word sent out in Morse Code from this wireless equipped news vessel.  In order to protect his life, Lionel James had him quickly disguised as a Malay pilot at the helm of this ship.
            However, both the Russians and the Japanese ordered the "Haimun" out of the war zone and so the ship steamed back to Wei Hai Wei where they picked up wireless operator Ahearn and his equipment and then they moved off to Nagasaki in Japan where the ship was discharged from service.  During his six weeks of war reporting service, Lionel James sent out a total of 10,000 words in his daily wireless dispatches from the "Haimun".
            As a postlude, the ship "Haimun" went back to service in Chinese waters; Lionel James stayed in the Far East and continued in service as a land based war reporter; and the two wireless operators H. E. Ahearn & H. J. Brown returned to the United States, where they were hailed as heroes back from the dangers in the environs of the war zone.
 
* Philippine DX Report - 21:49       
            Henry Umadhay
 
* Music of the World - 27:03
            Russia: Folk music, instrumental & group choir
 
* Closing Announcement - 27:19
            Thanks for listening to "Wavescan", international DX program from Adventist World Radio
            Researched and written in Indianapolis
            Next week:-
                        1. 75th Anniversary: All India Radio on Shortwave
                        2. NASB Report
                        3. European Perspective
                        4. Bangladesh DX Report
            Two QSL cards available - AWR & WRMI
            Wavescan address:-
                        Box 29235
                        Indianapolis
                        Indiana 46229 USA
            Wavescan @ AWR.org
            Jeff White, shortwave WRMI
 
* Music Outrun - 28:37
 
* Program Ends - 28:55
 

Monday, August 12, 2013

NIAR Independence Day Award 2013


NIAR Independence Day Award 2013
India celebrates its 67th Independence Day on August 15, 2013.
To commemorate the occasion, National Institute of Amateur Radio (NIAR), this year offers "NIAR Independence Day Award 2013".
This award is available to all hams and SWLs who contacts / monitors VU stations as follows on any HF band/mode between 0000 to 2359 hrs UTC (5.30 am to 5.29 am IST) of 15 August 2013 as follows.
India                   : 15 contacts
Asia & Oceania  : 5 contacts
Europe & Africa : 3 contacts
N & S America   : 2 contacts 
The award will be sent by email only.
Please send copy of log extract to  vu2nro@gmail.com
Last date for applications is 15 Sept 2013.

--
================================================
      National Institute of Amateur Radio
         Raj Bhavan Road, Somajiguda
           Hyderabad 500082, INDIA

          Tel. 91-40-2331 0287,  91-40-6516 7388
          Fax.91-40-2332 0787
 
        E mail: niarindia@hotmail.com
           Web site: www.niar.org
        Club station: VU2NRO 14160 kHz 
         Echolink - VU2NRO-R, VU2RG-R
Via VUHams YG