翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Forest Home (Trinity, Alabama)
・ Forest Home Cemetery
・ Forest Home Farms
・ Forest Home Historic District
・ Forest Home Township, Michigan
・ Forest Home, Alabama
・ Forest Home, Amador County, California
・ Forest Home, New York
・ Forest honeyeater
・ Forest Hopkins
・ Forest horse
・ Forest horseshoe bat
・ Forest House (Charles Ross House)
・ Forest House, Chester
・ Forest Idyl
Forest Industries Telecommunications
・ Forest industry in Finland
・ Forest informatics
・ Forest Inn, Pennsylvania
・ Forest Inspectorate of Włocławek
・ Forest Institute
・ Forest Institute of Vallombrosa
・ Forest integrated pest management
・ Forest inventory
・ Forest Junction, Wisconsin
・ Forest K. Ferguson
・ Forest kindergarten
・ Forest kingfisher
・ Forest Knolls, California
・ Forest Knolls, Marin County, California


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Forest Industries Telecommunications : ウィキペディア英語版
Forest Industries Telecommunications

Forest Industries Telecommunications (FIT) is a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) certified frequency coordinator and a non-profit association. Established in 1947,
its members include those companies or individuals who employ or are eligible to use Land Mobile Radio Service (LMRS) two-way radios.
They help manage radio frequency spectrum, perform engineering services, and prepare and certify applications for submission to the FCC. In 1997, FIT was certified to coordinate and file applications on behalf of all business and special emergency entities.
==History==

FIT was organized early in 1947 to represent the needs of the forest products industry to the Federal Communication Commission. The forest industry operates in remote regions where commercial wireless systems are not available; according to the FCC, this lack of coverage is one of the most commonly cited reasons for having a Private Land Mobile Radio (PLMR) system.
Among the forestry industries, private radio service is chiefly used by the lumber and paper industries.
In 1982, the United States Congress amended the Communications Act of 1934, permitting the FCC to certify private companies as frequency coordinators in order to develop and manage the Land Mobile Radio Service spectrum. FIT was among the pioneers using computer databases to manage LMRS frequencies.〔
Until February 1997, private land mobile radio frequencies below 512 MHz were divided among ten separate radio services: the Industrial Radio Services (Power, Petroleum, Forest Products, Film & Video Production, Relay Press, Special Industrial, Business, Manufacturers, Telephone Maintenance) and the Land Transportation Radio Services (Motor Carrier, Railroad, Taxicab, Automobile Emergency). As part of a "refarming" initiative to use these frequencies more efficiently, the FCC consolidated these services into one Industrial/Business Radio Pool.
As a former coordinator for the Forest Products pool, FIT could then coordinate frequencies throughout the Industrial/Business Radio Pool, along with the other former coordinators.
In November 2001, Nextel Communications proposed that the FCC relocate certain users of the 800 MHz radio band to address interference problems between commercial users and public-safety radio services. Along with the National Association of Manufacturers, MRFAC (another frequency coordinator), the American Petroleum Institute, and others, FIT protested Nextel's proposal. FIT endorsed a "consensus plan" alternative.
In 2004, the FCC extended FIT's frequency-coordination authority to the 929–930 MHz paging frequencies and the PLMR Special Emergency frequencies below 512 MHz.
FIT was the only group to protest a proposal removing the FCC's rule against high-powered mobile repeaters in the Industrial/Business Pool frequencies below 450 MHz in 2010, citing concerns that without the rule, licensees might engage in a "power war", creating interference. The FCC understood, but did not share, FIT's concern.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Forest Industries Telecommunications」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.