| Well, kinda. CB Radio enforcement is notoriously lax, so there are people out there with kilowatt broadcasts going on. From Reddit. |
| This was entitled "Old Wives' Tale", and I have to agree. Kind of like a similar one about gamers. From QRZ.com. |
| Well, kinda. CB Radio enforcement is notoriously lax, so there are people out there with kilowatt broadcasts going on. From Reddit. |
| This was entitled "Old Wives' Tale", and I have to agree. Kind of like a similar one about gamers. From QRZ.com. |
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| Not that big of a crowd, but definitely some interesting people. Especially the one twice my height. |
| There was a crowd here, but by the time I figured out how to hide the UI for a screencap, they'd left. |
| Such as visiting the bank. |
| Or crafting. |
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| I didn't bother hiding the friendly toon names. |
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| But that's because the party is inside. |
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| From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2024. |
| Then whatever the hell this is. |
| And WTF is THIS?? |
| I only came up to her waist. |
| And on this one I was thigh high. |
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| Here's Neve after playing around with the Furbolgs. |
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| If you ever wondered whether ham radio and MMO hobbies are similar... Yes, they are. From imgflip and SP3POW. |
The night before that first class I tossed and turned in bed, finally getting to sleep after 1 AM. It had been at least 24 years since I last had an in-person class*, and I wasn't sure what to expect. Would I be the oldest person there? Would there be a crowd? What sort of people would the students be? The instructors? Would I have issues even getting inside the building?
The answer to that last question, thankfully, was no. There were two people monitoring the front door and I didn't get harangued any more than necessary, once I explained I was there for the ham radio class. I followed their directions to the correct room, and I discovered that much to my surprise I was one of the youngest people in the class.
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| From memeguy. |
There were seven people in the class (myself included), and three instructors. I soon learned that the instructors viewed the class as something closer to providing guidance while we learned the material for the entry level license, the Technician Class. They admitted that we really didn't need them to learn the material, as the ARRL books were fine for learning the material, but they were there to provide some hands-on learning about amateur radio as well as answer questions. I could see that despite the class being free that some people would drop the class after realizing that they could just study by themselves and take the test --and to be fair, one did**-- but once I got over the initial disconnect between my expectations and the reality I warmed up to the class.
Part of it was seeing the equipment up close and personal, which to a gearhead like me I found fascinating, but I think another part of it was that the instructors were uniformly upbeat about our chances of passing the exam. As long as you study, take practice tests online, and keep up with it, they said numerous times, you'll pass.
***
While the ARRL had its own practice test website, and I did take those practice tests while I studied, I spent a lot more time on hamstudy.org:
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| This place became my friend. This is as of November 8, 2025. |
I could take tests and study by being quizzed on all of the exam questions to my heart's content. That's one nice thing about the Amateur Radio license exams in the US: all of the questions are taken from pools of 400 (Technician), 450 (General), and 622 (Amateur Extra) questions for each license class, respectively. Since those are already known, you could theoretically study for the test by simply memorizing the questions. Of course, that doesn't really teach you anything other than how to pass the exam, but it could be done.
When I started taking the practice tests for the Technician exam, I realized I had my work cut out for me. I had to get 74% of the questions correct on the exam, so that meant 26 out of 35 for the Tech license, and I wasn't even hitting that. For somebody who'd prided himself on being at least somewhat savvy with radio and electrical circuitry over the years, that was tough to accept. If I were serious about this, I realized I was going to have to buckle down and really study.
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| That's mint tea, no caffeine. I wanted to sleep when I was done studying for the night, you know. |
I not only studied at night, when I'd typically get on WoW Classic and play for a bit, but also whenever I had a break at work. And for the astute among you, you likely notice that there were not only Technician Class license books as part of my study regimen above, but also General Class books. Because I can't simply do one thing at a time, I suppose.
When I started down this amateur radio classwork, I'd set a lofty goal for myself: to not only get the Tech license, but the General too. While the Tech licenses primarily focus on VHF and UHF frequencies, when most people think of "ham radio" (myself inclued) they think of people operating on the shortwave bands. Those bands, known as High Frequency (HF) in radio nomenclature, are between 3 Mhz and 30 MHz. The Tech license gets you access to the entire 10 Meter band (28.0 MHz to 29.7 MHz in the US), but if you want to talk to people using speech on the rest of the HF amateur radio bands you need a General Class license. Given my longtime interest in shortwave radio, it made sense that I'd want to do that. And, of course, my own arrogance led me to believe that I could do that easily.
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| Uh, nope. |
That practice result above was pretty much normal for me. This was but one of the times when I discovered I not only didn't remember a lot of things --the mathematics, in particular-- there were a lot of items I never had to deal with as a shortwave listener that I would encounter as a ham radio operator, such as concepts behind transmitters.
About the only good thing I did when I started taking the class was to NOT tell anyone that I wanted to pass both the Tech and General classes; I was putting enough pressure on myself as it was without being an asshole and waving a flag around yelling "LOOK AT ME!!! I'M AWESOME!!!!" I've had enough humble pie served to me over the years that I wasn't going to do that at all.
By mid-October, I was passing practice tests for the Technician Class exams with regularity, so I shifted my focus to the General Class test. I had about 2-3 weeks before the license exam of November 1st, so it was very much crunch time.
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| The stress I was putting myself under was kind of like this. From Real Genius and makeagif. |
| From Facebook. |
| It had that smile on its face, too. From theprchiro via Cheezburger. |
I took a few deep breaths and calmed myself down. "It's only $15," I thought to myself. "I can take it again if I flunk."
Then I started slowly, working on the questions I knew. I answered all of those questions, then started working on all of the ones that I hadn't seen very much or I had trouble with. After that, I was down to a couple of questions that I just guessed at, and then spent another 5-10 minutes just making sure I didn't do anything stupid like selecting the answers in the wrong row***. I then had to wait another 5 minutes for my turn getting my test graded.
I passed.
That was a huge weight off of my shoulders. I took a deep breath and inquired about taking the General test. In short order I was back at my seat with a new set of questions to work on, and this time I relaxed a bit. The hard part was over, and now it was time to just go for it.
For some reason I found these questions easier, even though I knew I was going to get more wrong than the Technician exam. I'm not sure why, but my suspicion is that the pressure I was putting myself under was gone, so I found it easier to not dither and simply select answers. I finished, turned in my exam, and soon learned I passed the General exam as well.
"Do you want to try for the Extra?" one of the volunteer exam coordinators asked.
"Sure, let's do this!" I replied with an enthusiasm I didn't feel.
I sat down with the highest level exam, looked at the first question, and I knew the answer. "Hey," I thought. "I can do this."
Then I got to the second question.
"Uh.... Nope."
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| Yeah, this. From 9GAG. |
Oh, that last exam was brutal. Positively brutal. I knew almost by the 3rd or 4th question that I wasn't going to pass this exam. Hell, I wasn't even going to get 50%. Of the 50 questions on the Extra exam, I answered about 15-20 for certain, and took a stab at 3-6 more, then I just selected "A" for all the rest. There was no penalty for just guessing, so why not?
"So," another of the exam coordinators asked as I turned in my sheet, "how'd you think you did?"
"You know how you're in college and you're in a seminar, listening to professors talk about their research and you have absolutely no fucking idea what they're talking about? It was like that."
They all laughed.
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| Yes, this Mr. Bean skit was going through my head while I was taking the Extra exam. From Pinterest (and Mr. Bean, obviously). |
It turns out that while I did fail, I got 20 questions correct. They told me I did a great job for going in blind on that Extra exam, and now I had something to shoot for.
Once I filled out some forms, I went out into the waiting area where everybody else was hanging around to see how I did. "Passed the General, and bombed the Extra," I replied.
I got congratulations from the rest of the students and the instructors, and once I'd signed a few extra documents we all left the building.
I'd like to say that my journey was just beginning, but the reality is that it's kind of on hold right now due to the government shutdown. The FCC won't process the paperwork until the government reopens --meaning I can't transmit on my own equipment until my license appears in the FCC database-- so I've got time to relax a bit and try to figure out what starter radio to purchase before I dive in. Still, four of us in the class have gotten to know each other fairly well, and we even met last Saturday for lunch. The club that sponsored the class and the exam was very welcoming, and I think I'm going to join that club and see how things go.
So now you know what I've been up to for the past couple of months.
*System Admin class for HP-UX. While I knew UNIX since I coded on Silicon Graphics workstations back in the 90s, the sysadmin side of things was new to me, so I was sent off to a couple weeks' worth of classwork.
**Two dropped, but one of them had to drop because work kept them from attending regularly. The other simply stopped coming.
***Yes, I've done that before.
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| Originally by Jabin Botsford via Getty Images and The Washington Post. Found on grist.org. |
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| The later ones had a numeric LED, but this was the model I had. From Hackaday. |
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| This was my first kit. (No, not the real thing, but a picture of the model.) Yes, it did work, but I had to hook up the wire to a water pipe to hear anything. From Radiomuseum.org. |
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| The ICOM IC-7300, currently $1099 at Ham Radio Outlet (as of November 6, 2025). It's actually $300 off the regular price with coupon. Picture from ICOM America. |
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| Okay, I laughed. From Reddit. |
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| Yep, the same book I posted about a while back. |
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| That's what it felt like. Thanks, XKCD! |
By the time you read this, we might have had our first snowfall of the season. Accumulations of up to 1 inch/2.5 cm expected.
So, in honor of that, I figured I'd present some first snowfall of the season memes...
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| Ha! From FowlLanguageComics.com and Brian Gordon. |
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| Uh, I hate to tell you this, but that freezing sensation in your brain isn't what you think it is. From Reddit. |
| Yep. Pretty much this. From imgur. |
| But if it's a cute winter, can we keep it? From funnybeing.com. |
| From Reddit. And can confirm. |
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| From WAVE 3 News. The original news link is gone. |