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The Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA) was formed in 1910, and is the first and oldest national amateur radio society in the world. It represents [ 1 ] the amateur radio operators of Australia as the AR " peak body " in dealings with the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), the authority under the government of Australia ...
Hannam during the Australasian Antarctic expedition. Walter Henry Hannam (1885–1965) was an Australian wireless experimenter, a founding member of the Wireless Institute of Australia, wireless operator and mechanic on the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, a member of the ANZAC Wireless Company in World War I, and tireless promoter of amateur radio in the 1920s.
The Wireless Institute Civil Emergency Network (WICEN) is a group of Australian emergency amateur radio organisations. [1] WICEN groups provide communications during emergencies or disasters when normal communications stop working. WICEN groups have assisted during bushfires, [2] floods and cyclones. [3]
Jeffryes during the Australasian Antarctic Expedition. Sidney Harry Jeffryes (20 July 1884 – 16 October 1942) [1] [2] was an early Australian wireless telegraphy operator. . Trained by Australasian Wireless, he was initially employed on coastal shipping and established at least one record for distance transmis
Although Australia's first officially recognised experimental broadcast was made in 1905 (see below), there are reliable reports in September 1897 [1] (just two years after Guglielmo Marconi's original radio experiments) of demonstrations of wireless communication in Australia conducted by Professor William Henry Bragg of the University of Adelaide [2] [3] following experiments by Bragg, and ...
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Charles Maclurcan was President of the Wireless Institute of Australia, immediately following Ernest Fisk. Maclurcan also designed and built the popular Maclurcan radio receiver. The call sign 2CM is the only one listed by the Federal Government as never to be reissued, in recognition of the pioneering achievements of Charles Maclurcan. [4] [5]
The Australia Hotel was at the time, Australia's most luxurious hotel and the destination of choice for the wealthy and famous. The hotel was the venue for the first meeting for the establishment of the Wireless Institute of Australia in March 1910. This station itself, was useful to the company, primarily for testing equipment at its main ...