An example of a "desired communication" (not me, of course!) would be the
desire to show off one's station and be the loudest on the net. --Mike,
WV2ZOW
On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 11:22 AM, Glen Zook via Amps <amps@contesting.com>
wrote:
> The necessary power level required to carry out the desired communications
> is, again, dependent on just what "desired" means! As such, the regulation
> has no meaning in technical terms.
> Until "desired" has a quantitative value, there is no minimum, or maximum
> (up to the full legal limit), that defines necessary. Of course, this is
> semantics. However, when dealing with legal requirements, every term has
> to have a definite meaning.
> The definition of "desire", in the New Webster's New Universal Unabridged
> Dictionary (the "big" dictionary that used to sit on a table, by itself, in
> the library), that is applicable to this is:
> 2. to express a wish to obtain.
> Since such is on an individual basis, there is no quantitative value that
> can be applied. Glen, K9STH
>
> Website: http://k9sth.net
>
>
>
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