Examples of telecommunication in the following topics:
-
- That thinking changed beginning around the 1970s, as sweeping technological developments promised rapid advances in telecommunications.
- Telecommunications deregulation came in two sweeping stages.
- In 1996, Congress responded by passing the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
-
- Title II of the Communications Act focused on telecommunications using many concepts borrowed from railroad legislation and Title III contained provisions very similar to the Radio Act of 1927 .
- In 1996, Congress enacted the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
- The Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau (CGB) develops and implements the FCC's consumer policies, including disability access; The Enforcement Bureau (EB) is responsible for enforcement of provisions of the Communications Act of 1934, along with FCC rules, orders and conditions of station authorizations; The International Bureau (IB) develops international policies in telecommunications like coordination of frequency allocation; The Media Bureau (MB) develops, recommends and administers the policy and licensing programs relating to electronic media, including cable television, broadcast television, and radio in the United States and its territories; The Wireless Telecommunications Service (WCS) deals with Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) and fixed, mobile, and broadcast services on the 700 MHz Band; The Wireline Competition Bureau (WCB) develops policy concerning wireline telecommunications.
-
- The term is commonly used in the telecommunications industry to refer to telecommunications systems (e.g., radio transmitters and receivers, remote controls, etc.) that use some form of energy (e.g., radio waves, acoustic energy, etc.) to transfer information without the use of wires.
- The most common wireless technologies use electromagnetic wireless telecommunications, such as radio or infra-red signals.
-
- The United States would like to make the Internet a tariff-free zone, ensure competitive telecommunications markets around the world, and establish global protections for intellectual property in digital products.
- Americans also complained that Japan was exporting steel into the United States at below-market prices (a practice known as dumping), and the American government continued to press Japan to deregulate various sectors of its economy, including telecommunications, housing, financial services, medical devices, and pharmaceutical products.
- As part of the accord, which was negotiated over 13 years, China agreed to a series of market-opening and reform measures; it pledged, for instance, to let U.S. companies finance car purchases in China, own up to 50 percent of the shares of Chinese telecommunications companies, and sell insurance policies.
-
- This was especially evident in the large scale deregulation of agriculture and the telecommunications industries.
-
-
- As an example, after an accounting scandal and a chapter 11 bankruptcy at the giant telecommunications company Worldcom in 2004, its bondholders ended up being paid 35.7 cents on the dollar.
-
- After technical progress in telecommunications improved the possibilities of trade in services, India became a leader in this domain; however, many other countries are now emerging as offshore destinations.
-
- Consumer Reports also continues to do lobbying work around issues such as telecommunications and mass media, health care, and product safety.
-
- Around the world, government monopolies on public utilities, telecommunications systems, and railroads have historically been common.