- Joined
- Feb 25, 2024
I tried to talk about radio comms in general with an IRL friend of mine and all I get as response is "discord, internet, that sounds ancient, blah, not interested" -shit. So yeah, whatever then, it's like trying to argue with a wall.
Ham radio has always been at heart an experimental hobby for nerds and I think the ARRL and other people/orgs trying to get new people into ham radio should pivot more towards that idea. When I was operating portable, I've had kids, genuinely interested kids, come up to me and ask what my "science fair project" was all about. You can very much get new blood into the hobby, but I think hams (and not blaming anyone or talking to you specifically) are gonna fail getting people engaged with "you can talk around the world" as a motivation, because in the age of the Internet, radio is a pretty antique way of communicating and people won't really get it unless they understand how unique of a communications mode it is.
Even the motivation of "you can help in an emergency" is starting to wither dry. I've heard on the grapevine that untrained hams looking to help during disasters are starting to get turned away because they don't know much about what they're doing and federal funding for EMCOMM classes has dried up. Plus, we have Starlink now, which IMO will likely be more convenient for people and coordinators.
Radio has and always will have a future, but to get people interested, we should say stuff like:
- "I can talk to people using the moon"
- "Want to see me talk to somebody in Nebraska using these jumper cables and a dumpster?"
- "Ever wanted to say hi to astronauts?"
- "You can help out your community with big events" (won't really work out with kids, but older adults would likely be interested)
- "You'll learn a lot about how electronics work"
- "It can get you to not just touch grass at a park or climb a mountain but have extra fun while doing it"



