communicate between computers. PR is a complete amateur radio
computer network with "digipeaters" (relays), mailboxes (BBS)
and other special nodes.
In Germany, it is on HF, say, 2m (300 and 1200 BPS), 70cm
(1200 to 9600 BPS), 23cm (normally 9600 BPS and up, currently
most links between digipeaters) and higher frequencies. There
is a KW (short wave) Packet Radio at 300 BPS, too.
Satellites with OSCAR (Orbiting Sattelite Carring Amateur
Radio) transponders (mostly attached to commercial satellites
by the AMateur SATellite (AMSAT) group) carry Packet Radio
There are both on-line and off-line services on the packet radio
transfer files, connect to on-line DX-Clusters (DX=far
distance) to catch notes typed in by other HAMs about the
hottest international KW connections currently coming up (so
you can pile up).
AX.25 is like X.25 but the adressing uses HAM "calls" like
"DG8MGV".
There are special "wormholes" all over the world which
"tunnel" amateur radio traffic through the
Internet to
forward mail. Sometimes mails travels over satelites.
Normally amateur satellites have strange orbits, however the
mail forwarding or maibox satellites have very predictable
orbits. Some wormholes allow HAMs to bridge from Internet to
AMPR-NET, e.g. db0fho.ampr.org or db0fho.et-inf.fho-emden.de,
but only if you are registered HAM.
Because amateur radio is not for profit, it must not be
interconnected to the
Internet but it may be connected
through the Internet. All people on the (completely free)
amateur radio net must be licensed radio amateurs and must
have a "call" which is unique all over the world.
There is a special
domain AMPR.ORG (44.*.*.*) for amateur
radio reserved in the IP space. This domain is split between
countries, which can further subdivide it. For example
44.130.*.* is Germany, 44.130.58.* is Augsburg (in Bavaria),
and 44.130.58.20 is dg8mgv.ampr.org (you may verify this with
Mail transport is only one aspect of packet radio. You can
talk interactively (as in
chat), read files, or play silly
games built in the Packet Radio software. Usually you can use
the autorouter to let the digipeater network find a path to
the station you want. However there are many (sometimes
software incompatible) digipeaters out there, which the router
cannot use. Paths over 1000 km are unlikely to be useable for
real-time communication and long paths can introduce
significant delay times (answer latency).
Other uses of amateur radio for computer communication include
(2001-05-12)