Spent half of Saturday night talking on CB radio after some years. I was dead tired in the morning, but happy. CB is dying here, so actually finding someone to chat with is a success. Twenty years ago maybe half percent of Czech adult population had a CB transceiver. There was a list of call signs in a local CB magazine in 1996, which contained about 6000 names and those were just people who knew about the magazine and sent info to be published via classic snail mail. I found one of the first czech websites about CB radio and there is mentioned that just in the city of Liberec (ca 100 000 inhabitants) there were 500 people on CB. Now I hardly doubt there are more than 500 people left on CB in the whole country. The band is mostly silent during the night, as far signals fade away with sunset and nobody remains to replace them here. People from 90's are slowly dying out and younger generation has phones and internet, so they have no need to talk on such prehistoric medium. Then there is too much interference from industrial data transmissions, which nobody solves, because the group of complaining people is too small.
Some country-wide activity remains just during contests (still at least once a month), but even there figures show strong decline. An expedition portabling in 1000 m above sea level could easily contact about 300 stations during one night. Now they are happy if they do 60-70. Some smaller towns still have a local meetups on band, some even daily in specific hour, but average age of participants is way above 50. If find all of this sad, even though it's only logic.
How's CB in other countries?
Conversation
Notices
-
Logout (logout@hackers.town)'s status on Monday, 19-Aug-2019 02:54:51 EDT Logout