HomeNews News Comment by shadowfax By Single Comment March 30, 2014 0 35 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp psw-placeholder View Single Comment shadowfaxFebruary 25th, 2014 at 3:59 pm Phil as it is, international problem sumary of agreements or lack of: ITU Convention calls for minimizing the use of these resources, each country has an incentive to overstate its requirements, and there are few accepted or objective criteria for evaluating each country’s stated needs. Under these circumstances, it is easy to make a case that common plans are not only di?cult to construct, but lead to a waste of resources as frequencies and orbit positions are "warehoused" to meet indeterminate needs. Radio Regulations di?erentiate between primary and secondary services.?ose quali?ed as "primary" (or "co-primary") enjoy the full protection rights in relations to other stations. Stations of a secondary service shall not cause harmful interference to, and cannot claim protection from stations of primary services to which frequencies are already assigned or to which frequencies may be assigned at a later date. However, they can claim protection, from harmful interference from stations of the same ?. Radio Regulations, International or other secondary services ? Telecommunication Union, Geneva ????, RR?.?? to ?.?? Share FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Stay Connected157,292FansLike396,312FollowersFollow2,290SubscribersSubscribe Latest Articles Markets Ask Peter: Will the Russians Create a Great Northern Sea Route? Markets How a post falsely claiming migrants are registering to vote spread to millions in four weeks Markets These 32 Members of Congress Beat the Street in 2023 (And 1 Beat It by 10x) Earth, Climate Climate models can run for months on supercomputers – but my new algorithm can make them ten times faster Markets U.S. Imposes Sanctions on Chinese Companies for Aiding Russia’s War Effort Load more
February 25th, 2014 at 3:59 pm
Phil as it is, international problem sumary of agreements or lack of:
ITU Convention calls for minimizing the use of these resources, each
country has an incentive to overstate its requirements, and there are few
accepted or objective criteria for evaluating each country’s stated needs.
Under these circumstances, it is easy to make a case that common plans
are not only di?cult to construct, but lead to a waste of resources as
frequencies and orbit positions are "warehoused" to meet indeterminate
needs. Radio Regulations di?erentiate between primary and secondary
services.?ose quali?ed as "primary" (or "co-primary") enjoy the full
protection rights in relations to other stations. Stations of a secondary
service shall not cause harmful interference to, and cannot claim protection
from stations of primary services to which frequencies are already
assigned or to which frequencies may be assigned at a later date. However,
they can claim protection, from harmful interference from stations of
the same ?. Radio Regulations, International or other secondary services ?
Telecommunication Union, Geneva
????, RR?.?? to ?.??