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Part 68—concerning direct connection of all terminal equipment to the public switched telephone network; Part 73—Radio Broadcast Services; Part 74—Remote Broadcast Pickup; Part 80—Maritime Service; Part 87—concerning aviation services; Part 90—concerning licensed wireless communications for businesses and non-federal governments
In the United States, the business band is the colloquial name used by radio users who utilize and scanner hobbyists who listen to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Industrial/Business pool frequencies. The regulations listing frequencies in this pool are contained in Subpart C of Part 90, Title 47 of the CFR.
Frequency coordinators, in this case, are private organizations that have been certified by the Commission to recommend the most appropriate frequencies for applicants in the designated Part 90 radio services. This frequency coordination process is intended to make more efficient use of the PLMR spectrum for the benefit of all members of the ...
The FCC's mission, specified in Section One of the Communications Act of 1934 and amended by the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (amendment to 47 U.S.C. §151), is to "make available so far as possible, to all the people of the United States, without discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex, rapid, efficient, nationwide, and world-wide wire and radio ...
LMR Narrowbanding is the result of an FCC Order issued in December 2004 [3] mandating that all CFR 47 Part 90 business, educational, industrial, public safety, and state and local government [4] VHF (150-174 MHz) and UHF (421-470 MHz) Private Land Mobile Radio (PLMR) licensees operating legacy wideband (25 kHz bandwidth) voice or data/SCADA systems to migrate to narrowband (12.5 kHz bandwidth ...
The emission designator for QAM is D7W. The D7W comes from Paragraph 42 of the FCC's July 10, 1996, Digital Declaratory Order allowing then ITFS/MMDS stations to use 64QAM digital instead of NTSC analog. The emission designator for COFDM is W7D. The W7D comes from Paragraph 40 of the November 13, 2002, ET Docket 01-75 R&O.
The FCC is seeking answers from handset manufacturers Apple, Google, Motorola, Nokia, Samsung and others that collectively cover over 90% of the U.S. smartphone marketplace. The companies did not ...
In October 1990, President George H. W. Bush signed the Children's Television Act (CTA), an Act of Congress ordering the FCC to implement regulations surrounding programming that serves the "educational and informational" (E/I) needs of children, as well as the amount of advertising broadcast during television programs aimed towards children. [6]