Attention
all major Wireless Telephone®©
Companies and WiTEL - Wi-Fi Broadcasters. The Next
Century of the Wireless Telephone®©
is waiting for you! Get Ready for 2009 -- the 101st
year of the Wireless Telephone®©
Organization . . . See WiTEL.org . . .
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Money 120
PIXELS 3 columns
NBS100
TELECOM STUDY - "C" REMEDIES ----Since
1908 - the U.S. government has
sold and granted licenses for the
right to use the frequencies
emitted into the atmosphere by
the wireless telephone, radio,
and television broadcaster. The
amount exceeds more than $30
Billion
Dollars. 1888
- The
Stubblefield Mechanical Telephone
Patent No. 378,183, February 21,
1888.
Click to Go To US Patent
Office -- then Click Full Text to
refresh page. Nathan B.
Stubblefield and Samual Holcome
patents their mechanical
"vibrating" telephone system. The
first permanent mechanical
telephone installation was in
Murray, Kentucky to demonstrate
and sell franchised telephone
rights or territorial deeds
around the United
States.
MORE TIMELINE WHERE
COMPETITION THRIVES ///
©2005
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"Wireless"
NBS100
FTC STUDY - THE Red Flags
Rule
"ID
Theft Prevention" - for the WiTEL®©
Industry"
Buy
Amazon
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PAGES-2-3FTC
FIGHTING
FRAUD WITH THE RED FLAGS
RULE
A
How-To Guide for Business
As many as nine million
Americans have their identities
stolen each year. Identity
thieves may drain their accounts,
damage their credit, and even
endanger their medical treatment.
The cost to businesses &endash;
left with unpaid bills racked up
by scam artists &endash; can be
staggering, too.
ABOUT
ANTENNAS
----As
the keeper and repository for the
original Nathan B. Stubblefield
wireless telephone patents and
trademarks, 1898 and 1908
respectively,
YOU
HAVE ALREADY BENEFITED by the
efforts of
the Nathan
B. Stubblefield Family Fund.
NBS100 has
been
accounting for the billions of
dollars worth of wireless
telephone frequencies, various
governments have been sellling --
since
1908.
The NBS100 team has
contributed
to the the following successful
research
projects:
----1.
NBS100
participated in the TVI
Publications of the History of
Wireless Broadcasting and the
Smart Daaf Boys,
1991.
----2.
NBS100
participated in the recent China
Xingtv, Wireless Webcast VRA
TelePlay production of the
Ddiaries, a television series
about Wireless Telephone, the
compass and the SMART DAAF
BOYS
----3.
NBS100
participated in the 1992, 1996
and 2002
demonstrations
to finalize the inclusion and
relationship of the Internet with
Stubblefield's firewire and
Wireless telephone system within
the world wide Internet
system.
1898
0508 - Wireless Telephone
Transmission Coil Patent -
United
States Patent No. 600,457,
Granted May 8,
1898.
Click
to Go To US Patent Office -- then
Click Full Text to refresh
page.
PATENT WAS ISSUED TO
STUBBLEFIELD FOR the ELECTROLYTIC
COIL. The Patent was referred to
as the: Electrolytic Water
Battery, the Electrolytic
Oscillating Coil, the Induction
Coil, Earth Battery, Undamped
Transmitting Coils, The
Stubblefield's Electrolytic
Detector
Wireless
telephony presented, not only the
greatest competitive challenge to
wired line service in the 1900s,
but at present.
The
failure of state and federal
regulatory policy to stimulate
meaningful competition in wire
line services does not mean that
consumers lack for choices in
local calling services. Seemingly
by the ends day, affordable
telecom technologies and new
applications come to market place
out of nowhere, like
Stubblefield's 1892 wireless
voice phone, and today's wireless
video telephone. What skewed
Stubblefield's wireless voice
telephone, was the name, and it's
challenge to replace land-line
phones with wireless. Of course
history tells us, that voice
transmission was held back by
future war time regulatory
frequency seizure to became
something bigger and harder to
decipher . . . the transmission
of Dit Dah over "Radio" waves by
Marconi. The "freebie" local
Radio Broadcast station, took
over after that. AT&T, at one
time, claimed the rights to
royalties for the ads sold.
Timeline
Exhibit "E" / 1925 to 1934 -
"Radio Stations / FCC formed /
FOR
MORE STORY -
NBS100e
Timeline "E" / 1925 to 1934 -
"Radio Stations / FCC
formed
Wireless
Telephony
WIRELESS TELEPHONY PRESENTS THE
GREATEST COMPETITIVE CHALLENGE TO
WIRE LINE SERVICE AT PRESENT.
The
wireless telephone still presents
the greatest competitive
challenge to wire line service at
present.
Cellular
subscriptions have increased from
just 92,000 nationwide in 1984 to
more than 165 million
today.
34
A
primary factor driving this
extraordinary growth was the
decision by Congress to relax the
FCC's grip on the broadcast
spectrum. In the early 1990s, the
FCC had restricted the number of
wireless carriers to two per
market. The 1993 Budget
Reconciliation Act, however,
forced the FCC to auction
spectrum for up to six carriers
per market. Consequently, by
2003, more than 95 percent of the
nation was served by at least
three wireless
services.
35
This
growth is entirely due to
wireless carriers competing in
the open market to build their
own networks, with none of the
regulatory management of growth
that has characterized wire line
competition. Opening the market
dramatically lowered prices. The
average revenue for wireless
service dropped from 47 cents per
minute in 1994, before the
spectrum auctions, to 29 cents in
1998; 18 cents in 2000; and 11
cents in 2002.
Simply
put, the average price per minute
for wireless service decreased by
more than 75 percent in the seven
years after Congress eased
federal regulation of the
spectrum.
During
the same period, average monthly
cellular usage by consumers rose
from 119 minutes per month in
1994 to 427 minutes per month in
2002.
In response to the "open market",
created by
DeForest RADIO TELEPHONE COMPANY,
Nathan B. Stubblefield's Wireless
Telephone Company and
his
All Purpose - Wireless Telephone
Patent,,
the DeForest Audion Patent, the
formation of the CONTINENTAL
WIRELESS TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH
COMPANY, 1909, and a few other
newly
filed wireless telephone patents,
and to the burgeoning land-line
competition, American Telephone
and Telegraph (AT&T) began
buying up the stock and patents
of their bankrupt rivals. But
AT&T's acquisitions troubled
federal authorities, which began
considering antitrust action.
This prompted AT&T company
officials to propose what
subsequently became known as the
"Kingsbury Commitment."
In 1907, Bell rivals, controlled
51 percent of local service, by
1911, 70%. Of course by that
time, the customers of Murray,
Kentucky's NBS company, the
DeForest
RADIO TELEPHONE COMPANY, and the
assets of the CONTINENTAL
WIRELESS TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH
COMPANY.
07
Timeline
Exhibit "A" / 1868 to 1905 - "The
Land-line to Wireless" /
FOR
MORE STORY -
NBS100a
Timeline "A" / 1876 to 1905 -
"The Land-line Telegraphy and
Telephone"
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