Federal circuit court in DC is set to rule on net neutrality and
appears poised to strike it down.
http://www.wired.com/opinion/2013/11/so-the-internets-about-to-lose-its-net-neutrality/
That means say byebye to internet radio. Small-scale community
netcasters won't be able to "negotiate" fees with The Bigs to get
access, even at speeds that are common today in residential
broadband.
If that occurs, it strengthens the moral justification for pirate
radio and similar solutions, by a decimal place or two. In the
spirit of which...
...anyone here ever hear of CONELRAD?
That was the late 1950s - early 1960s plan for Civil Defense
emergency broadcasting in the event of nuclear war. All FM stations
would go off the air, and AM stations would switch over to low-power
broadcast on 640 KHz and 1240 KHz. Incoming Soviet bombers (in the
pre-ICBM era) would be unable to use RDF (radio direction finding)
to navigate, while citizens could pick up the emergency stations
that were nearest to them. Radio dials were marked with little
triangles at 640 and 1240 to make the CONELRAD broadcasts easy to
find.
The signal interference issues Anthony and others brought up, must
have been addressed during the design of the CONELRAD system. If
nothing else, AM reception is more directional, and the lower
frequencies (kilohertz rather than megahertz) would reduce the
problems of signal synchronization, including during times when
official announcements were being broadcast simultaneously over all
the stations in a region.
If this is the case, then blanket coverage by low-power AM
transmitters might be technically feasible.
-G
=====
On 13-11-04-Mon 2:17 PM, Anthony Di
Franco wrote:
_______________________________________________
sudo-discuss mailing list
sudo-discuss@lists.sudoroom.org
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss