Ham's Last Stand
First Published October 2006
PHOTO: randi silberman
|
When IEEE Spectrum Senior Associate Editor Stephen
Cass [at right in photo] needed a particular antenna
cable in order to review a software defined radio system
[see “Hardware for Your Software Radio”], he didn’t
think there’d be a problem obtaining one. After all,
Spectrum’s offices are in New York City: if
you can get lotus roots, a first edition of Joyce’s
Ulysses, or a US $14 000 pair of shoes by
hopping on the subway and going to the right shop, how
hard could finding a cable be?
To his surprise, Cass soon ran into trouble.
“Electronics stores in New York seem to fall into two
camps,” he says. “There are the ones that sell consumer
electronics like TVs and computers, whose staffs
couldn’t even fathom what I was looking for. The others
are out of business.” A plethora of stores that once
catered to the city’s electronics and radio hobbyists
have largely vanished from New York, leaving only a
trail of disconnected phone numbers. Cass was about to
give up, when he came across the number for Barry
Electronics: “A person answered—and they actually
understood what I was looking for!”
Barry’s is on the second floor of a small building on
Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Its main business is
selling commercial walkie-talkies and other radios, but
it also sells amateur radio equipment—the last remaining
retailer in Manhattan to do so. With a bit of riffling
through cabinets and some trial and error, Barry’s sales
manager, Jonathan Siegel [at left in photo], found what
Cass needed.
“I was lucky Barry’s is still around,” Cass reflects.
“I could have tried to buy the cable online, but there’s
no substitute for being able to examine things in person
to make sure you’ve got the right stuff. It’s just a
pity Barry’s is all that’s left.”