ICQ Amateur / Ham Radio Podcast

View Original

DMR Radios Open Up The World To Students in India

Students in government residential schools in rural parts of the Indian state of Karnataka can now reach out and touch the world with the help of Digital Mobile Radio, or DMR.

Twenty new DMR radio base stations are opening up the world to students in rural schools run by the state of Karnataka’s Social Welfare Department. The installation was done by the Indian Institute of Hams at the request of the state. According to news reports in the Hindu and the Bangalore Mirror, science teachers and a pair of eighth-grade students from a number of the schools received online training for their amateur radio licenses and then successfully sat the exam from the Ministry of Communications.

The radios are designed to give the students access to scientists, researchers and others in the amateur radio community who would normally be inaccessible from within their remote rural communities. The radios are available to be operated around the clock. Just as significantly, the radios are available so the schools can serve as emergency communications centres when disaster strikes and the remote regions are likely to be cut off from many services.

The initiative is called Ham Yatra and spans the state, the ham institute’s director, S. Satyapal [pron: Sat-YUH-poll] told local media. He said he hoped the radios would open a window of curiosity for the students about opportunities in the world of science.