July Update

This is an update on some of our activities for the month of July, 2024.

It’s hot as fuck outside, and the engineers are overworked.

CW studies continue.

Experiments with 17-foot telescopic whip antennas continue.

One of us is building a 12v DC refrigerator and a large backup battery box. Writeups with images will follow, assuming these projects ever get finished.

The biggest communications-related story this month is obviously the massive Crowdstrike failure. A faulty update on July 19th caused the largest IT outage in history.

While the popular takeaway from this story is that tech workers should not deploy on Fridays – a take which implies that blame rests solely on one person or a small team – we think the larger lesson here is that modern Capitalist industrial infrastructure is an albatross. It’s large, unwieldy, and contains many single points of failure. Too much rests upon the shoulders of too few people.

And no, ham radio is not the answer to this, but it could be part of a solution. If telephone and Internet systems had blacked out, even on a local level, it would be important to have a backup. Whether that’s a blister pack FRS radio or a full blown HF base station or anything between, that set of skills and equipment could be part of an ad-hoc communications infrastructure with no possibility of this type of cascading failure for everyone who uses it.

It should be noted that while the Crowdstrike outage seems to have impacted “consumer” level communications much less than commercial, industrial and government systems – the issue of corporate consolidation of local mass media has been quite the can of worms for a long time and does have a major impact on local communities.

To be honest, it would be easy to point to this incident and say “See? This is why you need to get into ham radio, or solar power, or canning vegetables…etc.” But the truth is that most of this stuff works for most people, most of the time. So we don’t really want to sound alarmist. But it’s also true that we started to see the cracks in these systems years ago and they’re getting bigger with climate change, the housing crisis, and massive wealth disparity. The bigger these cracks get, the more people are going to fall through (as hundreds of millions already have), and the more we’ll need to rely on ourselves and each other when we fall through these cracks.

The apocalypse is here. It’s just not equally distributed. ~Margaret Killjoy

So what can you do? Short of setting up a separate “air-gapped” Windows computer in case this sort of thing ever happens again, it may be more worth while to learn how to use other systems such as Linux. Maybe set up a flash drive with different operating systems on it ready to install in case of a prolonged outage or outright destruction of your primary operating system, or just in case some other kind of bullshit happens to your computer and you can’t afford Windows. And it should probably go without saying: Back up your shit!

(and have a backup power source as well as lights and fans…and a water filter…and fix your bike…and grow food…and have a potluck…)