Again, I took that to be obvious. Not really sure how this relates to what you quoted though.
You spoke about the likelihood that the radio operator would "receive the message and decide to record it for a skald to review it". That's not what *I* would do when I receive a transmission that is a) obviously from humans, rather than grosslings, b) at a place where we had no idea humans survived in the first place, c) short enough to suggest that they're actually (still) searching for other humans and d) thus likely to vanish again if I don't answer their call
right away.You used to send your papers using a straight key? Or do you mean a keyboard? Because the second is a lot less impressive.
Then be prepared to be a
lot less impressed ten seconds from now. Morse ops doing serious amounts of text didn't stick with the historic straight key, either.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraph_keyAnd the
sender using a full keyboard to create a Morse transmission is not any more complicated than using a largely identical device to create the 5-bit characters of the abovementioned RTTY system.
My point is that most facilities (both in terms of labs and libraries) necessary to build up a biomedical research program will be situated in cities [...]
Iceland, emphatically, has all these things.
And
that right there is proof that your point fails to prove anything.
Iceland was among the first
nations to go into isolation. That, plus a series of facts (magic, old gods and beliefs, initial immunity rate) where we have
NO FLEETIN' IDEA how much they apply to anywhere else in the world, formed the basis of their survival.
Also, from a global perspective, Iceland was
geographically close to where the Rash initially broke out. They
needed to be fast with isolating themselves, and might very well have fallen incommunicado at a point in time when other places in the world still had time to get their isolation going in the first place. And by "places", I'm explicitly acknowledging the possibility of a state/region instituting a lockdown against the will of the national government, further hindering the knowledge thereof getting out.
The truth is that with the knowledge we (and the post-Rash Nordics) have, other, sufficiently remote parts of the world can be
ANYTHING from fully dead to just uninhabited to having a large but lo-tech human population to being literally covered with the invasion fleet of the evil aliens who released the Rash upon an unsuspecting mankind and are now staring scared stiff at some of those primitives who just up and
survived their ultimate bioweapon.
But the question is, if that "hello, anyone out there" is in Japanese (or even better, Wabun Code), would an Icelandic Morse code operator be able to understand it or even recognize it as a language? Or would they assume it's troll static?
Well, that's first and foremost depending on what that troll static is like exactly. The stuff we've seen is radio speakers emitting what appears to be yelling in the local human languages; any radio op hearing that here and now (and not knowing about Rash and trolls and SSSS) would swear up and down that it
IS humans trying to communicate in their spoken language.
Telling proper Morse from
random interference is a no-brainer (certain Hollywood movies notwithstanding). Make your dits and dahs and the pauses between have the proper duration (dashes exactly three times as long as dots, etc. etc.) and it'll be pretty obvious that that's an artificial signal even before you transcoded from Morse to letters, much less wonder what language the resulting words might belong to.
Unless there's an actual, internationally recognized "hello, anyone out there," similar to how "SOS" is internationally recognized.
If I were trying to contact survivors of unknown familiarity with Morse in a postapocalyptic world, I would
definitely add in some
SOSs(*) early on even if there's no emergency at hand. CQ, QRRR, MAYDAY, group of Vs, etc. etc. are plain unrecognizable to the laymen.
(*) Note that the distress call
SOS is different from the
text "SOS" in Morse in that the character-separating pauses are omitted;
...---... instead of
... --- ... . Such established "shorthand" Morse "characters" are usually indicated by a line
atop the run-together letters. And yes,
SOS would be undistinguishable from
EU7, if the latter were also established.