Jumat, 10 Oktober 2008

Islam Channel Tv



























A BRIEF HISTORY...
The first television experiment in North Texas was conducted by station W5AGO. It was assembled by engineer Truett Kimzey (who later started Greenville, TX radio station KGVL,) and, in March, 1934, the $1,500 worth of TV equipment was put on display for viewing at the Fort Worth Stock Show (a video signal was sent there from Kimzey's TV studios at Downtown Fort Worth's Commercial Standard Building.) Unfortunately, the crude equipment was soon outdated, as the FCC was still hammering out industry standards for technology that wouldn't be in wide use for another 20 years...and the Southwest wouldn't see television again until the late 1940s.

September 29, 1948 brought regular television broadcasting to the airwaves of the Metroplex when Fort Worth's WBAP-TV signed on. The very next day, the FCC froze all TV applications until they could sort out standards and procedures for the quickly-evolving medium. Applicants who had already received construction permits (CPs) could go ahead and build, however, or one could purchase an existing station to get into the TV business (as did Belo with Channel 8.) Although the freeze was lifted on 4/14/1952, the DFW area did not see a new station established until KFJZ-Channel 11 in 1955.

During the past 50 years, North Texas has seen television evolve from its humble beginnings with three channels and lots of local programming, to six local channels in the 1960s, to the introduction of cable TV to the masses in the 1980s, to watching the advent of HDTV and digital unfold in the 2000s.

RETURNING TO THE SITE SOON!
"DFW Television Memories"

Algeria Tv

























Tv Mesir

























Tv Brunei



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A BRIEF HISTORY...
The first television experiment in North Texas was conducted by station W5AGO. It was assembled by engineer Truett Kimzey (who later started Greenville, TX radio station KGVL,) and, in March, 1934, the $1,500 worth of TV equipment was put on display for viewing at the Fort Worth Stock Show (a video signal was sent there from Kimzey's TV studios at Downtown Fort Worth's Commercial Standard Building.) Unfortunately, the crude equipment was soon outdated, as the FCC was still hammering out industry standards for technology that wouldn't be in wide use for another 20 years...and the Southwest wouldn't see television again until the late 1940s.

September 29, 1948 brought regular television broadcasting to the airwaves of the Metroplex when Fort Worth's WBAP-TV signed on. The very next day, the FCC froze all TV applications until they could sort out standards and procedures for the quickly-evolving medium. Applicants who had already received construction permits (CPs) could go ahead and build, however, or one could purchase an existing station to get into the TV business (as did Belo with Channel 8.) Although the freeze was lifted on 4/14/1952, the DFW area did not see a new station established until KFJZ-Channel 11 in 1955.

During the past 50 years, North Texas has seen television evolve from its humble beginnings with three channels and lots of local programming, to six local channels in the 1960s, to the introduction of cable TV to the masses in the 1980s, to watching the advent of HDTV and digital unfold in the 2000s.

RETURNING TO THE SITE SOON!
"DFW Television Memories"

RTM 1



























How Products are Made: How is a radio made?

Background

The radio receives electromagnetic waves from the air that are sent by a radio transmitter. Electromagnetic waves are a combination of electrical and magnetic fields that overlap. The radio converts these electromagnetic waves, called a signal, into sounds that humans can hear.

Radios are a part of everyday life. Not only are they used to play music or as alarms in the morning, they are also used in cordless phones, cell phones, baby monitors, garage door openers, toys, satellites, and radar. Radios also play an important role in communications for police, fire, industry, and the military. Although there are many types of radios—clock, car, amateur (ham), stereo—all contain the same basic components.

Radios come in all shapes and sizes, from a little AM/FM "Walkman" to a highly sophisticated, multi-mode transceiver where both the transmitter and receiver are combined in one unit. The most common modes for a broadcast radio are AM (amplitude modulation) and FM (frequency modulation). Other modes used by ham radio operators, industry, and the military are CW (continuous wave using Morse code), SSB (single sideband), digital modes such as telemetry, radio teletype, and PSK (phase shift keying).

Radio Channel

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