Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral
Ok, I have a vibroplex that works well. You should get back into it againIshould get back into it againtched to a bug when I had a valve (Tube as you would say) transceiver that was sending RF down the keying line and burning out the relays in my home made keyer. My last bug was a McElroy that I bought as scrap and rebuilt.
I got the qrz part on the first line, but the last line is scrambledDuane: −−·− ·−· −−·· −−·− ·−· −−·· ··−−··
−·· · −−· ····− −··− −·− ···· ·−−· ··· · −·−
I can certainly see the benefit, especially for those who are averbal or otherwise have difficulty with speech. Of course, it is also a unique skill with an entire community surrounding it, but those benefits apply to pretty much anyone. Unfortunately, I don't know any local researchers well enough to bring the subject forward.I have not been able to show autism researchers morse. You have to see and try it to appreciate it. all I ask of them is a half hour of their time, with no luck.
I happen to have had the same experience, save that I did have friends, just not friends interested in learning morse code.I was into Morse code when I was a kid. I had this set of walkie-talkies, which is strange because I had no friends, so why did I have walkie-talkies? You could talk through them, but there was a button you could push to communicate through Morse code and it had a legend/guide right on the walkie-talkie. I LOVED that thing, and I would probably have learned it better if I'd actually used it. I mostly just...stared at it, I guess.