WHAT'S GOIN' ON HERE?

Sunday, October 31, 2010

THE HOME OF BAB-O!...once.

Back in February, I posted some historical information concerning B.T. BABBITT, INC, the company which was best known for manufacturing BAB-O, a once very popular household cleanser. B.T. BABBITT had a number of factories around the United States and there was one of those located here in upstate New York, just a few blocks north of the PORT OF ALBANY. The company folded in the 1960s, it's registered trademarks scooped by other former competitors. But the buildings remain, in various physical states. The following two stills are of the main factory, now derelict some five decades since.Given today's economy, this once thriving manufacturing center will remain so until the structure is finally condemned and demolished.


The next shot displays a twin silo, which most likely housed tons of sand, which is the principal inert ingredient in scouring power. Back in the 1960's, the silos were painted to look like an enormous can of BAB-O and a container of GLIM, a liquid detergent also produced by B.T.BABBITT. This section is currently used as a garage by TRAILWAYS, a nationwide bus service.

The following two images show the third building, once associated with Babbitt, now under the aegis of EAST GREENBUSH LABEL AND TAPE and the PORT INDUSTRIAL CENTER.


Since Zach and I were in the neighborhood, we drove through the PORT OF ALBANY and got some extra detail such as this dockside crane.

These two structures are owned and operated by CARGILL, a producer of grains and other industrial materials.


This last shot was taken at GRECO CONSTRUCTION, displaying an ambiguous but quite curious sign on a cargo bay door.


More every day odd pictures later!

Sunday, October 10, 2010

And Yet...

Perhaps my recent posting of "A Letter To This Week In Amateur Radio" may have helped to jump start events. Please check TWIAR for an update to my previous posting. And yet, despite the up-to-now comatose condition of This Week In Amateur Radio over the past year, some loyal hams did continue to write in for the TWIAR QSL CARD!
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Here, in no particular order, are a few recent e-mail requests for an Official This Week in Amateur Radio QSL Card. The more traditional pathway of writing a reception report and mailing it to: This Week in Amateur Radio Post Office Box 30, Sand Lake, New York 12153 has given way in recent years to an e-mail request sent to n2fnh@capital.net. So, whether you receive the program over your local VHF or UHF repeater, copy the show over WBCQ or download the latest weekly Internet Podcast, you can get your own TWIAR QSL Card by taking pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard. either way works!


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Hi this is Brandon, KB1THM listening to TWIAR via iPod. I would like some info on the schedule that twiar plays on WBCQ ad I'd listen to it there. I'd like a podcard I don't know how you send them email, mail or what ever but my info is on QRZ. I love the podcast, it's a nice mix of news and funny stuff. I wonder how you do those funny voices? Anyway 73 from CT.
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Brandon -kb1thm
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Howdy! Remember me? Ron Bicksler from Des Allemands, LA. Still enjoying TWIAR via podcast. Got my license now. Trying to get the fam to get their licenses too but I suspect I'll be renewing mine before they do. May I have the new podcard?
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Ron Bicksler - KE5PFE
Thanks gazillions!
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Hi;
I listen to you via the podcasts via WBCQ. The signal is strong on the IP stream here in Oslo, Norway, hi. Would love one of the podcards!
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73, de LA1PCA
Oslo, Norway

Friday, October 8, 2010

A Letter To This Week In Amateur Radio.

Bill,
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I used to listen too TWIAR every week on my way to work and totally loved it of course... well I don't exactly know what happened a few months ago which caused your team to stop making POD-CASTS but really do miss you all!!! Any plans to start up again or what is the scoop over there that lead to going off the air on? I used to also have your POD-CAST playing due VE TESTING sessions here every month so future HAM's would hear some latest HAM NEWS while going through the testing process. I know the international version is still going on but don't listen to that one.
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Please if you have a few moments can you let me know...
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Jeffrey (...callsign and e-mail address held)
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Hi Jeff,
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Many thanks for dropping me a line concerning This Week In Amateur Radio. You should know that you are not alone in asking these questions. The short story is, that I believe TWIAR, TWIARi and TWIAR-NEWS HEADLINES are now in the full autumn of their run. While this is one man's opinion, here is the background on the programs' current state...and eventual fate.
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Up until about two years ago, George Bowen W2XBS produced This Week In Amateur Radio each Friday night and Saturday morning with such an amazing professional consistency that you could set your time piece upon it's arrival over local repeaters around the country. It would be actually be a big deal if the show was released a day late, albeit rarely, with George's affiliates clamoring at the e-mail inbox.
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In late 2004, This Week In Amateur Radio expanded from the original ham radio service with the inception of This Week In Amateur Radio International, which was more entertainment oriented. The special features like the Ancient Amateur Archives, the Random Access Thought and Leo Laporte The Tech Guy plus some additional musical content moved more toward center stage mixed in with a twenty minute news block and a broader technology-based news reporting style. Soon after TWIARi, George began production on a one-hour news-only version of TWIAR for those organizations, clubs and repeater owners who wanted just the news and not the special features and expanded additional tech coverage.
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The bottom line is that George was now generating three programs each week instead of just one. Failures to meet program deadline began when George gained employment in a job where his weekly schedule varied dramatically from week to week, thus putting pressure on the ability to produce. Around the same time, George decided to reacquaint himself with personal health and fitness, something he had been big on in his twenties. You may notice now a special feature revolving around the overweight state of many amateur radio operators. This feature is a sonic manifestation of that change in lifestyle.
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George has also joined a local YMCA and now applies the same zeal to cardio that he once had for TWIAR. His wife says that he is largely burnt out. After seventeen years, it would appear that he may be thinking of letting go of the franchise, but who knows for sure? I have had several discussions with him suggesting maybe a bi-weekly or once-a-month program but there has been no real response to these any of these thoughts. He continues to speak as though he is still producing big time.
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I think too that George may been affected by the fact that he was never able to "sell" the TWIARi program. Since that show is carried over WBCQ, a stateside shortwave station, along with the matching Internet podcasts, there have always been promotional requests running within the presentation for interested advertisers. Due largely to the sad state of the economy and a clear difficulty in being able to demonstrate actual listener numbers, there have been no takers. I believe George had high hopes that TWIARi could generate a few dollars, something that the ham-only shows can not do because of legal restriction.
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So in the end, it is my opinion that the future does not look good. I hope I am wrong. George produces shows when he has the available time and often it is the International that makes it out the door. Currently on the website, there is an announcement indicating that TWIAR is on summer hiatus. I believe the last two weeks were no shows for any shows. I know that George was going to prepare a music-only program for air over WBCQ on the fourth of July and I already had an all-music Random Access Thought in the can to go with it but...
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Perhaps the saddest part of the story may be that the TWIAR programs may just end at a untimely point when no one will be around to listen and to notice.
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I decided to go in depth in answering your letter because I thought someone such as yourself, a loyal This Week In Amateur Radio listener, should know.
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Thanks again for writing.
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Bill N2FNH