Pagers are alive and well in ham radio! Using your digital Hotspot you can relive the 90's with a pager that receives on ham radio frequencies. You can also set your pager up to receive ham radio news like band conditions, SOTA spots and DXCluster information. It is also a great environment to homebrew your own applications to send information to your pager!
NAZ: I absolutely hate pagers! In early 1966, as a senior at Georgia Tech, I was asked to, and did, establish and then manage, the very first Motorola owned portable / pager repair facility away from the Schamburg, Illinois, Motorola plant. The location was the Motorola C&E Area Office located in Forest Park, Georgia (southern suburb of Atlanta). We serviced pagers with operating frequencies as low as 67 kHz all the way to 470 MHz. While there, I wrote the field service manual for the Motorola Pageboy pager (later called a "Pageboy I" to keep it separate from the smaller Pageboy II pager). Then, during the entire 1970 decade, when I owned the Motorola reconditioned equipment center for the south-central United States, we reconditioned a LOT of various pager models. Next, during the 1980s, a company, that I owned, handled the radio paging systems for a number of Hospitals in the Dallas, Texas, area including the primary county hospital for Dallas County and the University of Texas research hospital. The administrator, at the Dallas County hospital, asked me to carry one of the pagers operating on their particular frequency. I asked why and was told so that they could immediately contact me when the paging system went down. I asked the question several times before she realized that, if the paging system was down, they couldn't page me! It was not until I was employed as an in-house telecommunications consultant with TXU (electric company and a lot more) for almost half the State of Texas, that I had to carry a pager. I was on the emergency response team for various functions including the nuclear electric generation Comanche Peak Steam Electric Generation plant. Unfortunately, the telephone number for the pager was very close to that used by a pimp. Several times a week, usually in the middle of the night, I would get a page. Then, when I called the indicated number, it would be one of his "girls" who had been arrested, assaulted by a "client", or something similar. Since my telephone number had been widely distributed, not only within the company, but with first responders, news agencies, etc., I was not allowed to get another number! The result is that I still "cringe" when I hear paging tones, digital, etc. Basically, I won't touch a pager with a 3.048-meter pole! Glen, K9STH
I have my hotspot all setup for it and there is also the app from Dapnet on my phone I have used (send myself texts). I have been back and forth on if I really want or need to buy a pager as it seems I can get all the info I need on my cell. I do get the "fun" factor but problem is no one else seems to want to join in the fun.
Interesting... would need to take a look at ... 97.111 Authorized transmissions https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/47/97.111
Back in the day we use to sent pages via a device called a TNC.. I wonder if you can create your own app that does not require a web service to sent out page. http://www.n5dux.com/ham/files/pdf/Ham Radio Paging-Putting POCSAG On Packet.pdf
I set up a PocSag " Repeater" using an MMDVM Hotspot running Pistar a few years back. It's nice to have it and to know how it functions, but I found myself simply not using it as much as in the US there isn't much interest in it, perhaps now there will be. I finished the BLog post here today adding some details on how to accomplish this, unfortunately like I said the pager is 100$ and unless there are other folks in your area that have the same interest in this hardware and software you will find yourself with a pricy pager without any need for it. https://km4ood.net/ham-radio-pager-dapnet/
It is 100$ and unless you are into software development or want to tinker with it, it quickly gets old as it isn't much you can do with it other than get a small page. But it does play on our nostalgia a bit, that's actually why I got into it a few years back.
WHY?????? In 2019, most of us have a phone with all the the web and apps for band conditions, SDR rec, spots, DX Cluster information and QRZ and it is two way!
I don't know about sending that data, but part of the reason I became a ham was to be in charge of my own communications and not dependant on cellular network that I have no control of. I use APRS for some of this functionality and it's two way, but paging is another cool option.
Surprisingly, there's a LOT of pager activity, even today. POOCSAG and FLEX being the most popular. Mostly medical, sports, news and e-comms. There's at least a dozen constantly busy freqs with pager traffic in my area (near Portland Oregon). Here's one of a few decoders. Lots of How-To on YouTube. Needless to say, obey all laws regarding such monitoring. 73
K9STH said: ↑ ... I asked the question several times before she realized that, if the paging system was down, they couldn't page me! It's like dispatchers forever transmitting "All units, check for an open mike" when there is a carrier on the channel. Sorry for getting off-topic, but that is a pet peeve that forever makes me shake my head. The unit stuck on transmit won't hear the request, unless it is using a time division mode like MotoTrbo/DMR or Open Sky with pre-emption enabled. Those systems can send a "shut up" command in a timeslot between the field unit's TX bursts. A field unit with a portable stuck in transmit while inside a vehicle that also has a quality mobile resistant to desense might hear the dispatcher on the mobile, but usually not the other way around. What I would do is initiate a roll call. The unit that doesn't answer, or make some noise trying to get though the carrier, is the culprit. /rant
Eat, sleep and drink ham radio 24/7. I remember when pagers were very popular then came the bag phone. What next you say?
Because it is a radio (a sort of) and because we can. It's just another toy. Personally I don't think it would be interesting 'coz we already have two-way APRS and have adopted some SMS-enabled commercial radios like DMR. But if play with DMR, why wouldn't we play with POCSAG? Do you mean DX spots sent via packet? Technically spots could be sent via packet sats to cover wider areas, not only terrestrial. Any radio could receive spots and tune in with just one button; no internet/computer/smartphone required. Except all-in-one TS-2000, one would need VHF mobile (e.g. TM-V710) to receive packet data and to tune a rig with CAT; TS-2000 receives and tunes itself with Packet Cluster Tune. Convenience of commercial products and wide availability of commercial networks are obvious. But anyway we want our HAM radio to play with. And I'm not saying that when everything commercial will fall down due whatever reason, HAM radio will work.