Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ups.com... From: on Jun 27, 6:11 pm Jim Hampton wrote: The HF bands are, many times, international in scope. This story is not about the FCC, it is about international agreements. It's about both, really. There we have it from an "insider." The US delegation to the radio conferences looks to FCC for input, though. (Not just FCC, of course.) There's a big difference between what happens if FCC says that 75 is such a mess it isn't worth defending at the conferences versus the reverse. WRRRRONNNNNGGGGGGG. The U.S. delegation to the WRCs IS composed of members from the FCC, the NTIA, and Department of State. All three. You can read that on the FCC website or read the Report of the Chairperson (OF the FCC) on WRC-03. There's also a lesson in human nature in there, too. When Rudy Giuliani was elected mayor of NYC, one of his priorities was enforcement of The POLITICAL newsgroups are on the 2nd floor. Go there and find some Noo Yawk buddies. If you look at cell phones, you might get an idea of the extent of the problem. In developed countries, cell phones have become big business. In the U.S., every teenager "needs" one. It takes a lot of cell phone towers to provide service, not to mention ever increasing needs of frequencies. Right - but those will be VHF/UHF, not HF. Low end of L-Band, in the microwaves. Back in 1912, hams had access to "200 meters and down" (note - that did not mean any ham could use any frequency above 1500 kHz! It meant that individual hams could apply for, and receive, licenses to use specific frequencies above 1500. So could anyone else, but the professionals and experts of the time thought those frequencies were useless for long-distance communications. 1912 was NINETY THREE YEARS AGO, senior. The "audion" was only six years old and "electronics professionals" were still trying to figure out how to make them. When HF was carved into bands, US hams had lots of room. Before 1929, 40 meters was 7000 to 8000 kHz and 20 meters was 14,000 to 16,000 kHz - exact harmonics of 80! Got any more CUT AND PASTE from "200 Meters and Down?" Anybody in here born BEFORE 1929, senior? Most of the communications revolution has nothing to do with radio. It's all about fiber optics. Really?!? "Nothing to do with radio" yet it is a main subject of the following trade magazines: "Microwaves and RF," "RF Design." Not to mention the big Microwave Symposium recently in Long Beach, CA. The 100 MILLION plus 2-way RADIO handsets (called "cell phones") don't have any "fiber" attached to them. GPS doesn't work by "fiber." Those hundreds of thousands of public safety, utility, transport companies, businesses of all sizes, in VHF-UHF aren't communicating via "fiber." WLANS are RADIO since they were done to get AWAY from "fiber." RFID tag interrogators are working in RADIO frequencies in stores all over the USA and possessions. No "fiber." Bluetooth devices are short-range two-way RADIOS without "fiber" and most of those work with fiber-less cell phones. YOU need more mental fiber in your knowledge diet. Big business and the Republicans rule. "What's good for General Bullmoose...." Next time be careful of who you vote for. I've always been careful that way... But the Dems have a way of nominating candidates that too many people won't vote for. They're well on the way to doing it again with Hillary. She's the best friend the 'pubs ever had! Friend of mine once said that if you gave the DNC the job of organizing a firing squad, they'd put the squad in a circle around the condemned person. The POLITICAL newsgroups are up on the other floor. This one is about AMATEUR RADIO. Go join your "friend" there, okay? Hello, Len Amateur radio policy is *devoid* of politics? ROTFLMAO. The Repooblican party, big business, and frequency allocations have quite a bit of politics involved, my friend. 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|