World Administrative Radio Conference
The World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) was a 1979 technical conference of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) where delegates from member nations of the ITU met to revise or amend the entire international radio regulations pertaining to all telecommunication services throughout the world. The conference was held in Geneva, Switzerland, with preparatory conferences held in Panama City, Panama.
One outcome of the 1979 meeting was the allocation of three new amateur radio bands.
In 1992, at an Additional Plenipotentiary Conference in Geneva, the ITU was restructured and as a result from 1993 the conference became known as the World Radiocommunication Conference or WRC.[1]
Conferences list
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (August 2008) |
- ITU Preparatory to World Administrative Radio Conference Panama 1979
- ITU World Administrative Radio Conference Geneva 1979 (WARC-79)
- ITU World Administrative Radio Conference Geneva 1984 (WARC-84)
- ITU World Administrative Radio Conference Geneva 1992 (WARC-92)
See also
- Amateur radio
- Radio
- Telecommunications
References
- ^ ITU.int
- v
- t
- e
- Beacon
- Broadcasting
- Cable protection system
- Cable TV
- Communications satellite
- Computer network
- Data compression
- Digital media
- Drums
- Edholm's law
- Electrical telegraph
- Fax
- Heliographs
- Hydraulic telegraph
- Information Age
- Information revolution
- Internet
- Mass media
- Mobile phone
- Optical telecommunication
- Optical telegraphy
- Pager
- Photophone
- Prepaid mobile phone
- Radio
- Radiotelephone
- Satellite communications
- Semaphore
- Semiconductor
- Smoke signals
- Telecommunications history
- Telautograph
- Telegraphy
- Teleprinter (teletype)
- Telephone
- The Telephone Cases
- Television
- Undersea telegraph line
- Videotelephony
- Whistled language
- Wireless revolution
- Nasir Ahmed
- Edwin Howard Armstrong
- Mohamed M. Atalla
- John Logie Baird
- Paul Baran
- John Bardeen
- Alexander Graham Bell
- Emile Berliner
- Tim Berners-Lee
- Francis Blake (telephone)
- Jagadish Chandra Bose
- Charles Bourseul
- Walter Houser Brattain
- Vint Cerf
- Claude Chappe
- Yogen Dalal
- Daniel Davis Jr.
- Donald Davies
- Amos Dolbear
- Thomas Edison
- Lee de Forest
- Philo Farnsworth
- Reginald Fessenden
- Elisha Gray
- Oliver Heaviside
- Robert Hooke
- Erna Schneider Hoover
- Harold Hopkins
- Gardiner Greene Hubbard
- Internet pioneers
- Bob Kahn
- Dawon Kahng
- Charles K. Kao
- Narinder Singh Kapany
- Hedy Lamarr
- Innocenzo Manzetti
- Guglielmo Marconi
- Robert Metcalfe
- Antonio Meucci
- Samuel Morse
- Jun-ichi Nishizawa
- Charles Grafton Page
- Radia Perlman
- Alexander Stepanovich Popov
- Tivadar Puskás
- Johann Philipp Reis
- Claude Shannon
- Almon Brown Strowger
- Henry Sutton
- Charles Sumner Tainter
- Nikola Tesla
- Camille Tissot
- Alfred Vail
- Thomas A. Watson
- Charles Wheatstone
- Vladimir K. Zworykin
media
and switching
- Bandwidth
- Links
- Nodes
- terminal
- Network switching
- Telephone exchange
- Africa
- Americas
- North
- South
- Antarctica
- Asia
- Europe
- Oceania
- (Global telecommunications regulation bodies)
- Telecommunication portal
- Category
- Outline
- Commons
This article related to amateur radio is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e