21 Jun 2026

Meshtastic - the future?

 As I mentioned yesterday, there is a small, but dedicated group of experimenters. In my view, these experimeners will increasingly use licence-free bands such as LoRa at 868 or 915MHz.

In my view, Meshtastic and Meshcore are in their infancy. Given this, I expect we will see maturity in the next 10 years. In theory, these rely on mesh networks and don't depend on the internet. In big cities where coverage is good, this is fine. In rural areas, or areas with poor coverage, meshes may not reliably cover an area. Over time, these gaps are likely to be filled in.

I can imagine we will see "mature" data transceivers in the near future.

Is this where real experimenters will be found?


The end of linear broadcasting?

Increasingly people are watching what they want, when they want, using subscription services. At the same time many broadcasters are trying to save money.

To my mind, I can see an end to linear broadcasting. 

Instead people will watch what they want, when they want, all using subscription services. For example we may watch the latest news followed by the weather, followed by a film.

In the end I can see the BBC iPlayer becoming a subscription service and the licence fee in the UK going.

Most people will watch TV using subscription services or listen to things on their smart speakers.

Of course, the danger is we become even more dependent on the internet. What happens if the internet goes off either because of periodic issues or, heaven forbid, hacking?

Sunspots - Sunday June 21st

 Solar flux is 113 and the SSN 73. A=7 and K=1.

20 Jun 2026

Superpowers YouTube

 The opinion of Lieutenant General Ben Hodges is wise and inciteful.

Amateur radio future?

This is a subject that I have raised on this blog many times. It is a fact that in many countries that the average age of radio amateurs is now very high. Fewer young people are joining the ranks and even fewer stay. Radio no longer is the magic it was to old people.

In my view amateur radio splits into two camps. This may be a simplification. 

Some now just prefer to operate, increasingly using digital modes like FT8 with CW and SSB sharply declining. Some of these want to rise to the challenge of DXCC.

A few enjoy the challenge of experimentation. This can take many forms.

Another trend is deregulation, with many PTTS not wanting the hassle of dealing with a service that does not generate money.

In the future I can see a day coming when many PTTs will "throw in the towel" and will no longer police amateur radio and the allocation of callsigns. This could go several ways: amateur radio could merge with CB and become licence free. Experimenters will continue using licence free frequencies or paying for the privilage. Other options may emerge.

What is certain is amateur radio will change.

"Our" windmill at sunset

Last night we walked back from a Gilbert and Sullivan light opera quite close to home. 

The windmill right next door looked magical.

6m 3W FT8 (Saturday)

Stations spotting my 3W 6m FT8 today at 1312z

My gear was turned on at breakfast.

UPDATE 1725z:  Spotted by 177 stations.

10m 200mW WSPR (Saturday)

 My beacon was turned on at breakfast time.

UPDATE  1730z:  Spotted by 26 stations.

Flowers

 

These were near our home yesterday.

 I should know what they are!

4m in the Caribbean

 A station in the USA has an experimental licence for 4m. This station has been received in the Caribbean, presumably by Es on FT8. I hope it is copied in Europe this summer.