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Keyword: whitespace

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  • California Public School Promotes ‘White Space’ to ‘Unlearn Racism’

    02/24/2015 6:34:04 PM PST · by PROCON · 41 replies
    breitbart ^ | Feb. 24, 2015 | Assemblyman Tim Donnelly
    In a state where leftists use the public schools to promote their socialist ideology with impunity, imagine my surprise when a teacher handed out a flyer promoting racism. A parent of a high schooler sent me the following flyer that was handed out in one of her son’s classes at El Camino Real High School in Woodland Hills, California. I had no idea that it was acceptable in public high schools in California to promote the idea that an entire race of people are racist simply based on the color of their skin. But there it is—in black and...
  • FCC takes 'free love' approach to white spaces spectrum

    09/24/2010 1:25:00 PM PDT · by bigbob
    Network World ^ | 9/24/10 | Brad Reed
    The Federal Communications Commission's new approach to dealing with white spaces spectrum has gone from "proceed with utmost caution" to "if a channel looks open, use it." In its second memorandum opinion on white spaces issued Thursday, the FCC removed the requirement that devices operating on TV bands have built-in sensors that would automatically shut down the devices if they came into contact with an adjacent television signal. That requirement had originally been put in place to satisfy concerns of television broadcasters that were worried that unlicensed use of white spaces could interfere with their broadcast quality.
  • FCC Expands Use of Airwaves: 'White Space' To Be Opened To Devices Connected To Web

    11/05/2008 5:52:10 AM PST · by steve-b · 23 replies · 928+ views
    Washington Pest ^ | 11/5/08 | Cecilia Kang
    Preachers on the pulpit, Guns N' Roses and others who fear their wireless microphones would be disrupted by widespread public access to certain unused airwaves were drowned out by high-tech titans Google and Microsoft in a federal ruling yesterday. The Federal Communications Commission approved a plan that would allow those airwaves, called white spaces, to be used by gadgets such as cellphones and laptops connected to the Internet once that spectrum becomes available after the national transition from analog to digital television in February. Opponents of the plan, including preachers and entertainers, say such devices could interfere with broadcast channels...
  • Dolly Parton enters 'white space' debate (FCC to policy change could have repercussions)

    10/29/2008 11:21:27 AM PDT · by weegee · 14 replies · 1,098+ views
    Cnet ^ | October 28, 2008 5:12 PM PDT | Posted by Marguerite Reardon
    When Dolly Parton speaks people listen. At least that's what opponents to an upcoming Federal Communications Commission vote on opening up "white space" spectrum hope. Earlier this week, country western star Dolly Parton sent a letter to the FCC asking the agency to delay its vote to open up the unused spectrum for unlicensed use. "As someone who uses the white spaces and knows the value of them for the work that I and many of my friends around the country, I ask the FCC to recognize the entertainment industry's valuable contribution to the cultural life," Parton wrote in her...
  • Can anyone tell me what gives govt right to sell airwave for $6 billion.

    Computerworld — After the third day of the auction, bidding reached a total of $6.1 billion for 1,099 licenses in the Federal Communications Commission auction of 700-MHz wireless spectrum.
  • Tech giants lobbying effort at a crucial turning point - Microsoft/Google in bid for free Internet

    03/11/2007 11:04:24 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 27 replies · 1,031+ views
    Dow Jones MarketWatch (excerpt) ^ | March 12, 2007 | John Letzing
    SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- When Microsoft Corp. delivers a mysterious prototype for government testing this coming week, it will mark a crucial juncture for a high-stakes bid to change the way consumers get their Internet access. That bid has cast Microsoft and a group of powerful allies from Silicon Valley in the relatively unfamiliar role of Washington policy players. Microsoft's prototype, delivered on behalf of the group, is a wireless device that could provide the public with free and more widespread access to the Web instead of relying on networks owned by big telecom and cable firms. That breakthrough,...