Thanks to Samuel F.B. Morse, communication changed rapidly, and has been changing ever faster since. He invented the electric telegraph in 1832. It took six more years for him to standardize a code ...
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Earhart Search Records Declassified

It has been 88 years since Earhart and Fred Noonan disappeared over the Pacific, but until now, the records of the search ...
Bees obviously can’t use this skill on human level, but this progress could help scientists better grasp complex ...
Bees are not supposed to read code. Yet a new wave of experiments suggests that honeybees can track dot‑and‑dash style light ...
“Turn it off, hit the note, and turn it on,” Morse says, explaining the technique. The rolling motion essentially helps mimic ...
A new study published in the journal Biology Letters proves that they are also good at processing time. Through a series of ...
In a letter to House lawmakers, NRB argues permanent DST would limiting reach and public safety services of AM stations ...
A spectrum analyzer, engineer Mark Persons explains, is a marvelous tool that creates a “window” into the world of radio ...
The Vice President of Public Policy at the National Religious Broadcasters (NRB) has provided a formal Letter for the Record ...
When this happens, it means that more than one device is trying to use the same I/O port. Open the device manager and see if there are any yellow exclamation points next to any items. You want to ...
Many believe that ham radio is dying with all of the modern communications technology. Not so. There are still three million hams around the world, a quarter in America.
We think of radios as audio devices, but for people who are visually impaired, it can be difficult to tell which channel you ...