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- 2011283289 abstract "The use of radio-frequency communication--commonly referred to as wireless communication--is becoming more pervasive as well as more economically and socially important. Technological progress over many decades has enabled the deployment of several successive generations of cellular telephone technology, which is now used by many billions of people worldwide; the near-universal addition of wireless local area networking to personal computers; and a proliferation of actual and proposed uses of wireless communications. The flood of new technologies, applications, and markets has also opened up opportunities for examining and adjusting the policy framework that currently governs the management and use of the spectrum and the institutions involved in it, and models for allocating spectrum and charging for it have come under increasing scrutiny. Yet even as many agree that further change to the policy framework is needed, there is debate about precisely how the overall framework should be changed, what trajectory its evolution should follow, and how dramatic or rapid the change should be. Many groups have opinions, positions, demands, and desires related to these questions--reflecting multiple commercial, social, and political agendas and a mix of technical, economic, and social perspectives. The development of technologies and associated policy and regulatory regimes are often closely coupled, an interplay apparent as early as the 1910s, when spectrum policy emerged in response to the growth of radio communications. As outlined in this report, current and ongoing technological advances suggest the need for a careful reassessment of the assumptions that inform spectrum policy in the United States today. This book seeks to shine a spotlight on 21st-century technology trends and to outline the implications of emerging technologies for spectrum management in ways that the committee hopes will be useful to those setting future spectrum policy.--Publisher's description.".
- 2011283289 contributor B12171892.
- 2011283289 contributor B12171893.
- 2011283289 created "c2011.".
- 2011283289 date "2011".
- 2011283289 date "c2011.".
- 2011283289 dateCopyrighted "c2011.".
- 2011283289 description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- 2011283289 description "Introduction: trends and forces reshaping the wireless world -- Key technology considerations -- Policy options.".
- 2011283289 description "The use of radio-frequency communication--commonly referred to as wireless communication--is becoming more pervasive as well as more economically and socially important. Technological progress over many decades has enabled the deployment of several successive generations of cellular telephone technology, which is now used by many billions of people worldwide; the near-universal addition of wireless local area networking to personal computers; and a proliferation of actual and proposed uses of wireless communications. The flood of new technologies, applications, and markets has also opened up opportunities for examining and adjusting the policy framework that currently governs the management and use of the spectrum and the institutions involved in it, and models for allocating spectrum and charging for it have come under increasing scrutiny. Yet even as many agree that further change to the policy framework is needed, there is debate about precisely how the overall framework should be changed, what trajectory its evolution should follow, and how dramatic or rapid the change should be. Many groups have opinions, positions, demands, and desires related to these questions--reflecting multiple commercial, social, and political agendas and a mix of technical, economic, and social perspectives. The development of technologies and associated policy and regulatory regimes are often closely coupled, an interplay apparent as early as the 1910s, when spectrum policy emerged in response to the growth of radio communications. As outlined in this report, current and ongoing technological advances suggest the need for a careful reassessment of the assumptions that inform spectrum policy in the United States today. This book seeks to shine a spotlight on 21st-century technology trends and to outline the implications of emerging technologies for spectrum management in ways that the committee hopes will be useful to those setting future spectrum policy.--Publisher's description.".
- 2011283289 extent "xii, 99 p. :".
- 2011283289 hasFormat "Also available in Open Book format via the National Academies Press home page.".
- 2011283289 identifier "0309163986 (pbk.)".
- 2011283289 identifier "0309163994 (electronic bk.)".
- 2011283289 identifier "9780309163989 (pbk.)".
- 2011283289 identifier "9780309163996 (electronic bk.)".
- 2011283289 identifier catalog.php?record_id=13051.
- 2011283289 isFormatOf "Also available in Open Book format via the National Academies Press home page.".
- 2011283289 issued "2011".
- 2011283289 issued "c2011.".
- 2011283289 language "eng".
- 2011283289 publisher "Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press,".
- 2011283289 relation "Also available in Open Book format via the National Academies Press home page.".
- 2011283289 spatial "United States.".
- 2011283289 subject "384.54/524 23".
- 2011283289 subject "TK5103.2 .N398 2011".
- 2011283289 subject "Wireless communication systems Government policy United States.".
- 2011283289 tableOfContents "Introduction: trends and forces reshaping the wireless world -- Key technology considerations -- Policy options.".
- 2011283289 title "Wireless technology prospects and policy options / Committee on Wireless Technology Prospects and Policy Options, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences, National Research Council of the National Academies.".
- 2011283289 type "Electronic books.".
- 2011283289 type "text".