2m Simplex (146.520 MHz) recordings for 2026-02-15

Speaker A: But what a day for
Speaker B: a daydream.
Speaker A: Oh, yeah. N6mtm
Speaker B: good morning. I don't know.
Speaker A: Well, we usually do though, so I'm going to presume we are. I got up for about an hour, hour and a half and threw a bunch of wood on the fire. And me and Lori been laying in the bed just talking and talking and talking.

Speaker A: So you
Speaker B: know. You know why guys do that sort of stuff. That way they don't forget. Yeah.
Speaker A: Oh, A filter's kicking in. I haven't learned to recognize them in over 70 years, but. Yeah. Remember the old song? First comes love, then comes marriage?
Speaker B: Oh, yeah. Well, you probably don't have anything to worry about there then. Come
Speaker A: on, now. And once again, I'm gonna keep that one to myself. Myself.
Speaker B: She did real
Speaker A: good. A little bit of time that I spent around her, I was content in thinking that you didn't have anything to worry about.

All right. 45 degrees this morning. Lori woke up last night about 10 o', clock, said it was pouring, pouring rain. And shortly just before after that, she could tell a car was coming down the road at 100 miles an hour or better. And it ended up going down Centerville. And then the cops were right, not very far behind them. Well, I wouldn't want to be running from the cops down Centerville when it just got rained. Well, she read all about it already. It's in the. It's in the news. Well, let's think. I want you to think about this. Remember, you remember that little doohickey I showed you the other day that was up on the telephone wires? That guy sheared that pole off right across the street and then ended up over on its side up against another tree. And it wasn't a little bit before that. They were chasing a blue Charger down this road, but it didn't turn down Centerville. They lived somewhere down the road, you know, south of us. And this one last night. I'd rather they got them off the street. We're far enough back off the road. It's going to be pretty hard. But you never know when they're going to turn in your driveway. These people that run from the cops, we watch those shows on TV all the time. Jay, that doesn't make any sense. They either stole or they borrowed their mother's car. But they're driving perfect cars, no dents, nice paint jobs. And they decide to run from the cops and ruin the car? The keys are dangling in the ignition. Well, these new vehicles are almost impossible. I know. I've heard people get smart enough to get away with it. They know how to. They know how to configure a, you know, random key, bob signals and frequencies. And they can steal the new cars, too. Chargers are amongst the most stolen SRTs and stuff. You know, like the Dodges the cops drive. But anyway, most of those back there are all back east. 90, 90% of them are back east. And it's. It's always people that ended up with that car. You can tell it they probably shouldn't have had it. I mean, what do you got to run for? Unless you got £100 of something in the trunk or something like that, or you're already a convicted felon that's going back for 10 or 20 years or something like it. I can understand it. But some of these people are running. They just don't have a driver's license or insurance.

Speaker A: Yeah, I believe it. I haven't seen nothing like that. Pretty crazy stuff. You know, when I was growing up, if you got pulled over and you were doing something wrong, you just rolled with it. You don't got to run away. So what if they impound the car, you got it back, you do your time or pay your fine, and that you
Speaker B: still have a car. All right? Laurie always says you're expecting a level of intelligence that just doesn't exist. Exist. N6ntm Good morning.

I got some interesting stuff for you. Wip NTM on this image, so this will thrill you. I've been enthralled here since I talked to you last YouTube. Type in Elon Musk. Brutally honest New interview. So you know how, you know how lightning can discharge down to the earth? Because natural flow to Earth is ground. And he's explaining how much power solar panels in space. Not as fast as a lightning bolt, because that's a dead short. So, you know, you can understand how it can arc right through a pair of dikes or whatever, but a slower, controlled stream. Tighter, tighter streams delivering energy from space back down to earth way out there. Tera gigawatts. Mind blowing. Anyway, you want to watch that one. I'm only a quarter of the way through it, and I can't believe some of the intelligence that he's displaying. Oh, Lori sent me a link.

Speaker A: Oh, yeah, yeah. No, I know, I know. I. I read two autobiographies about Tesla. Got one sitting right here, and Marconi and General Electric and all that. Pretty up. Up on top of it. Go
Speaker B: gettermo. Mar. That was his name. Anyway, you'll
Speaker A: get a kick out of that. I'm back at it. We may see some of what he's talking about in this program. He's saying as early as four to five years, we'll start seeing big, big progress in energy. That's what he's focusing on right now. Not telephones or cars or any of that. Those are separate divisions that he already has. Extremely smart people handling it, and they're making their own breakthroughs. All right. Yeah, you'll thank me for that one, for this one that you haven't started watching. N6 NTM.

Oh, you're going to love that one, Jay Elon has categorized humans down to minuscule proportions. So, compared to AI and its ability to compute and the speed it can do it at, he says they're not plowing quite as deep as AI but even the best. Meat Intelligence. That's what he named it. That's what we are. Meat Intelligence. AI Is far superior.

With the technology applied to medicine alone. He said, he said it's not beyond the realm of possibility. It'll be very easy. And you'll see this within the next four to five years, that living to 150 years old is going to be easy peasy. Put it in your words, because they already, they already know how to manipulate atoms, and they're getting better and better at that. But, you know, the stem cell thing and growing organs and robotics, doing surgery precision super fast. Oh, man, he's not just dreaming. He's already, he's already exploring these things here and building things to get it done. You're going to love that program. All right. N6 NTM.

Speaker A: Well, I'm pretty sure that works. Kn6ngk on five, two. Yep. Good morning to you. How are you doing, Mr. J? Yeah, I got some stuff to straighten
Speaker B: out this morning. Electronically speaking with phones and stuff like that. Wacky stuff. Tried to get some new services yesterday and so forth. Not. Not too satisfied so far, so we'll see.

Speaker A: Jay. I know he's out there. That's W6LMD, but, yeah, it's not really here. A little scratchy. I hear some stuff, but not completely. So I don't know why. Must be using a different antenna this time on
Speaker B: this vehicle.
Speaker C: Well, you got that. You got that other little bump in the road, Steven. Even if you could hear him actually understanding what he's talking about to be the next thing you want to work on.
Speaker B: Yeah, that was just for fun.

Yeah. No, vertical here. Yeah. Either way, it becomes horizontal. Even nbis, once it makes the first bounce that you're back to horizontal, so.

Speaker A: Okay. 6m fm. Good morning. Yeah, you're loud and clear here. Just left the house running a little late. Yeah, welcome.
Speaker B: Welcome to the airwaves on your new rig. Sounds good. I used to wear the Yay2 audio as usual.

Speaker A: Roger that. I'll be on the highway here shortly.
Speaker B: Yeah, what I was saying was that your
Speaker A: audio sounds really good. Nice. Clear ya audio. Because it's getting out real nice.

Okay. Stephen j6.

Home sweet home in 6mtm.