Grazing on the commons: the emergence of Part 15
Purpose - This paper seeks to give an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Design meth...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Info (Cambridge, England) England), 2009-08, Vol.11 (5), p.72-75 |
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description | Purpose - This paper seeks to give an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Design methodology approach - The paper describes the aforementioned issue in detail.Findings - The paper has found that unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Originality value - The paper presents an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1108/14636690910989351 |
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source | Emerald Journals; PAIS Index |
subjects | Auctions Byproducts Communications networks Computer industry Frequencies Incumbency Information superhighway Licenses Licensing Personal computers Petitions Spectrum allocation Spread spectrum Telecommunication services Telecommunications Telecommunications policy Wireless networks |
title | Grazing on the commons: the emergence of Part 15 |
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