From the monthly archives:

March 2008

Is the QSL Card or the Confirmation More Important?

by Scot, K9JY

Flags - BDA and British With the end of the TX5C DXpedition, QSL cards will be flying through the air to confirm the contact.

But do you really want the card? Or do you really want the confirmation to be part of your DXCC total?

It’s an important question. There is a tremendous amount of post DXpedition operator time spent on the QSL function. The QSLing, in fact, goes on for years after the event (I still get VP9 cards from my DXpedition there in 2005).

To be perfectly honest, QSLing is not what I came into the hobby to do. I came into operate. But, if you operate, especially in DXpeditions and contests, you will get QSL cards — thousands of them.

It’s not so much the cost of the cards, but the TIME. Finding time to go through the log, write out the card (almost as fast as creating a label), getting the card into the envelope, putting on the right number of stamps, and getting them into the mailbox or bureau pile (in country order…) is just a real pain.

On the other hand, confirming contacts via Log of The World is a piece of cake. After uploading the LoTW file for VP9, some 89 countries were confirmed and a total of some 300 contacts were confirmed for DXCC credit — two days after I came home from the DXpedition.

With the advent of Global QSL, bureau cards became just as easy to do. Take the bureau card, tag the file, export the file and upload it to Global QSL and the rest is done by them. I can’t tell you how much time has been saved using these two methods of confirming the contact.

Now, some people really want a card they can hang on the wall. Mine are all in files by country — and I haven’t looked at them for years and am seriously considering throwing them all out.

The saying goes that the final courtesy of a QSO is a QSL. But is the final courtesy the card? Or the confirmation of the contact?

Scot, K9JY

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Marion Island ZS8T Web Site Up

by Scot, K9JY

image The Marion Island DXpedition web site is up. The DXpedition is scheduled for May of this year and the web site will be a great place to follow the progress. You can subscribe to changes on the site through their RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feed (http://zs8t.net/feed/) and participate in their forum.

I don’t need Marion Island for a new one, but for those who do, this is an impressive and informative site.

Scot, K9JY

PS Hat tip: Christian, DL6KAC

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WriteLog Site updated

by Scot, K9JY

Over the weekend, I did a lot of updates to the K9JY WriteLog User Site, though not much to the content.

WriteLog Site Screen Shot

Essentially:

  1. I replaced the theme with the one you see here on this site. It’s tough to maintain different themes — too many places where things are hidden that are in the documentation…somewhere.
  2. Updated all of the "plugins" that are used to help the content for the site.
  3. Updated the version of WordPress being used on the site.

The theme uses a smaller, non-expanding central column for information. Consequently, some of the pictures can be too large for the column. I spent a good amount of time getting the pictures into the column — but I have more to do in this area.

In addition, I fooled with the code a bit to get the columns right. I thought things were fine — looking at it with the Firefox browser — but then looked at it using Internet Explorer 7.0 and saw the whole thing totally screwed up. So if you came in on Saturday with IE, you probably had an interesting reading experience…

More work to do.

Scot, K9JY

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