On the heels of a Chris Messina’s Status Update from 1940, here’s another story of how ultimately familiar this emergent use of Twitter-as-global-network is.
Last week after Web 2.0 I spent a sunny Autumn morning wandering around in Brooklyn, including a stop at a favorite thrift store in Williamsburg. Pouring through their collections of old photos and postcards, a friend found something rather strange.

Amidst the christmas cards and “wish you were here” messages from Hawaii or Bali to friends or family were these funny post cards with call signs on the front and brief, almost functional messages on the back:

It turns out what we had stumbled on was a collection of QSLs, postcards sent back in the day from one shortwave radio operator to another to confirm that they had heard the transmitter’s station.
Before there were oodles of us pouring our conscious thoughts into the ether, whether by blog or 140 characters at a time, there was a smaller set of dedicated hobbyists creating soap boxes from radio antennas. And the fascinating part (at least to me) is how similar the emergent social gestures were. When one radio operator grok’d another’s signal, they’d fire off a postcard letting their new friend know their message was being heard.

As I imagine most shortwave operators would have, Ed Heger (@KA2HNO) collected his postcards as a sort of follow list. When lined up you can see he even checked each one off in the top left corner, perhaps as he logged them in a homemade database.

There is something definitively human about wanting to know your signal is being received, particularly when you’re casting it out into the void…
Tags: sxd

The checkmark was almost certainly just a “reply sent” mark.
73 de N6MOD
Surprised there were only QSLs from the US – it would be unusual for a ham in the New York area to have cards from California, but not from (at the very least) Europe, the Caribbean or Latin America.
Oh, by the way, we still send the cards!
73 de GI0RTN
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Thanks for reminding/sharing the existence of this practice… radio amateurs have been in my mind but I completely forgot this card business