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If you were to get back into amateur radio after 32 years, and didn't take serious interest in PSK-31, JT-65, and all the trendy digital voice nonsense, I think you'd be very disappointed; as much as I hate to say it.
The only thing I did was QRP CW. (For non-hams, that basically means very low-power continuous-wave telegraphy.) On the voice bands, I got tired of everyone talking about things like how many pairs of shoes their wife had. The more-serious people were on CW, ready to talk technical (although I can't deny having talked about music performance one time). I could also come closer to understanding the entire radio when voice was not involved (similar to why I like the 6502/816).
Morse is a lot more friendly than inexperienced people might think, not sterile or faceless. As I tuned across a band, I could immediately recognize the "voice" (fist) of various people I had talked to before, if they used a straight key instead of a keyer. I could say, "There's ol' Harry down in New Zealand...There's Bob up in Santa Maria...<etc.>" And you do get inflections and so on. It also goes faster than the WPM number suggests, because of all the abbreviating, and when you're going more slowly, you have time to think of how to say something in fewer words. I had no less fun talking to someone 150 miles away than someone 5,000 miles away, as long as we could ragchew. I didn't really like talking to the Japanese because they just wanted to get my QSL card and get off and get to the next person. I understand they had to prove so many contacts to upgrade their license. I enjoyed the code, and I enjoyed the challenge and success of communicating with simple equipment and low power. I don't think it would be as fun with a big black-box rig and 1kw linear and a 60' tower and beam antenna.
I know there are repeaters now that go through the internet so you could use a 2m or 70cm walkie-talkie to talk to someone thousands of miles away; but part of the value I see in amateur radio is to meet the need when the phone system or internet go down, whether locally or on a larger scale, for whatever reason that caused the emergency.
One friend has tried to get me interested in VLF, like 170kHz. I thought it was funny that I could do SDR on a 6502 and use an audio amplifier IC for the output!
It would be fun to see how low a power you can succeed with if the receiver's passband was only about 10Hz wide! For that matter though, you could do a very small HF transceiver with a collapsible antenna, since with VLF you're limited to 50 feet. That would be kind of like a 3-foot-long antenna on 80M.