N8RMA 2018 State of Amateur Radio Survey

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc2gJ0xG_2EeFAgInFRM0NYi4eW93IBqlBbpBAB2Hx6zkYPNw/viewform

Enough said, go take the survey! 

ok I’ll say more.

Last year some dude in Michigan (literally, that’s what he called himself) started a survey to get some demographic information on the state of amateur radio, just because he thought it would be cool to know things like…

  • What are the most popular bands and modes?
  • What are hams’ favorite activities?
  • How old are ham radio operators?
  • Why did hams get involved in amateur radio in the first place?
  • What do you think are the biggest issues and roadblocks in ham radio?
  • Are governing and lobbying bodies doing a good job? What should they do better?

The 2017 survey got 668 unique respondents and provided a rather unsurprising birds-eye view of the hobby:

  1. 2m is a favorite band
  2. Hams like direct QSLs best
  3. And only 12% of respondants are under the age of 35.
  4. #wearethe12%

It’s a little surprising that the IARU or other lobbying organizations like the ARRL don’t seem to spearhead massive demographic surveys, considering the FCC and other regulatory bodies tend to not have a . I’ve heard in the past a lot of money has been spent trying to determine the most unbiased way of generating surveys but never got around to it, or maybe they found a way and it wasn’t targeted to my (millennial) demographic? Who knows.

But then came N8RMA!

Many thanks to Dustin for putting the survey together and publishing the results last year. Here’s to looking forward to some awesome new data!

For those concerned about their personally identifiable information (call sign) going on the internet:

Privacy PolicyAny information provided will only be used, by me, on the survey results.This response data will not be given or sold to anyone, ever. I might not be GDPR compliant (heh heh) but as I stated, just for me. All the demographic stuff is optional, it’s a good baseline but not needed. I’m not affiliated with a marketing company or any ham radio lobby or company, just a dude in Michigan. Plus you know who I am so you can hunt me down. 🙂

-N8RMA

So although “callsign” is a required field, you don’t actually have to put your callsign…just put N/A or something if you would like to remain anonymous.

Go take the survey!

See the reddit discussion here.

So Long Cale, and Thanks for All The Fish

I am a little sad, a little happy to hear about the conclusion of the Ham Radio 360 podcast hosted by Cale Nelson, K4CDN.

The End of the Beginning…

On behalf of thousands of listeners, thank you Cale. Your podcast was a huge inspiration to all of us hams to keep inspired to learn more about amateur radio. There’s never been a podcast quite like it, and I think many will follow suit. It inspired me to start my own podcast (though I wish I could put the effort into it that Cale put into HR360!) and it was great to be a guest and a part of the community.

All 99 HamRadio360 episodes will continue to be hosted at http://hamradio360.com. I encourage you to take a listen through them all; it’s really quite the journey! The spinoffs, Workbench and Field Radio are continuing.

73 Cale and Best of Luck to your other 6ARN productions. Looks like you’ve got a lot on your plate!👋👍

An Example of the Broadness of Amateur Radio

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16375474

Hackernews (news.ycombinator.com) is a very simple link aggregator and forum (similar to reddit) that focuses on technology, cyber-security, tech companies, software development, venture capitalism and startups, and the like.

It’s always a happy day when amateur radio shows up on hackernews, because its community is smart – engineers, programmers, thinkers, doers, and hams. In other words, there are no cranky OMs there to ruin your day or overenthusiastic technophiles talking your head off.

ARISS came up today, and the thread blew up into a general, lightweight synopsis on a ton of different things that ham radio can offer. Since ham radio is “a thousand hobbies in one,”[1][2][3] I think it’s a great answer to the question “what can you do with ham radio?”

Check it out here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16375474