Hobbsc's latest phlog entry [0] got me thinking about amateur radio. I've been a ham for nine years, I have a general license in the US. I never did too much with it, although I have an HF transceiver and at one point I had started to learn morse code [1]. Given that I'm now living in Canada, I've been thinking about getting my Canadian license, as there is no license reciprocity between the two countries. While I can transmit here on my US license, technically that is only for visitors to Canada, not residents. Also, my US license is expiring next April, so that is giving me a bit more incentive to get licensed here. The licenses are different than in the US, here they have just two license classes - basic and advanced. If you score higher than 80% on the basic test, you get it 'with honours' and get all band privileges. Due to that I suspect most people opt not to go for the advanced license. The test itself is the usual 100-question multiple choice, taken from a pool of questions that are freely available (with answers, as in the US). There is also a 5wpm morse qualification, which is another way to get all band privileges with a basic license. Speaking of morse code, one of the better trainers I found was the free IZ2UUF Koch android app. I liked it better than lcwo or the ARRL code course because it was highly configurable. I did try several of the console morse trainers in the Debian repos (although I did not try aldo), but in the end I found the android app or just listening to the ARRL course mp3's (ripped from the CDs) more convenient. [0] gopher://sdf.org/0/users/hobbsc/phlog/20170805.org [1] gopher://sdf.org/0/users/slugmax/phlog_archives/learning_morse_code [2] http://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/smt-gst.nsf/eng/sf01008.html#s4.4