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WEEK
Wireless Cemeteries, and the
FCC
Wireless vs fiber vs wire landlines -
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06th Week 2006 / Los Angeles.
In
June, 2005, NBS100
TeleCom, announced
that a multi-million dollar project was underway to
memorialize the inventors of the wireless
telephone, firewire and
the
various wireless telephonic WiFi90 devices now
being used on the
Internet.
TVInews POW
Cover
Association
Pegnitz,
Germany
RadioPlayMusic
Since that
time, NBS100 has communicated their demands to the
members of the FCC to look into the Stubblefield
Family Trust claims for $27 Billion. The claim
stems from the amount collected in April, 2006, by
the FCC from the buyers of wireless telephone
frequencies leased to several major wireless
telephone companies last year. MORE
NBS100 STORY NBS100
has suggested the amount collected be paid to the
estate of the inventors of the frequencies.
SEE
MOVIE
ABOVE
Houston, Texas
attorney, Charles Portz on behalf of NBS100 stated
in his opening correspondence to the FCC legal
counsel, that all of the patented wireless
telephone frequencies described in the original
1908 patent, were confiscated by the U.S.
government in 1913, just prior to the European war
that was getting underway, but were never paid for.
NBS100, along
with several wireless telephone companies in the
Wi-Fi, DSL, and V.O.I.P, enterprises, are backing
the RTD wireless cemetery headstone project.
Attorney Portz says that if the $27 Billion claim
is acknowledged by the FCC, the manufacturers and
Universities involved in the wireless cemetery
project, could bring in as much as $4 Billion
Dollars per year to commence to build a wireless
network of WiFi HotSpots in every community
throughout America.
The
installation of towers in cemeteries will help
maintain the cost of cemeteries upkeep now paid for
by local communities and church groups. The income
derived from the telecom users of the antennae
towers would be a boon to the cities surrounding
the WiFi cemetery "hotspots."
Clearly, the
local communities and companies bear a large part
of the responsibility for their competitive skid,
when a Katrina-type of disaster hits their area.
How many times do managers have to put all their
eggs in the basket of the latest, money-guzzling
cash cow landline telecom systems like a fiber or
cable network of wires, only to be immediately
destroyed and snapped apart, caused by a fire,
flood, Tsunami or a terrorist attack in the
U.S.
During a recent
tviNews.com conference call discussion with
author-entertainer, Troy Cory-Stubblefield, and
Melody Jensen, movie development producer for VRA
TelePlay Pictures, -- Troy stated, "the action
taken to wire our cemeteries with WiFi Internet
links, would be just one of the alternatives used
to help avoid the disruption of telephone service,
like the one we saw during the Katrina Hurricane,
or during the 9/11 Twin Tower attack."
The problem is not
just mypopic city managers. Legacy costs --
skyrocketing cost in the bailout of MCI and
AT&T and growing competion between the
"wireless vs. landline" within the Federal / State
FCC segments of the telecom industry -- have
drained the bottom lines of the BigThree. Their
international competitors, even those with U.S.
facilities, bear a far lighter burden, "FCC rules"
ban them from owning frequencies.
"With that said,"
continued Melody Jensen, speaking on behalf of
NBS100, "the NBS Wireless Telephone memorial WiFi
antennas, are now part of the real story about
radio and television frequencies. They will be
established at all major cemeteries with part of
the $27 Billion collected from the FCC. The NBS100
wireless telephone network will be contructed in
the U.S., Phillipines, Asia and Western Europe. The
feature film, "NBS and his Wireless Telephone," is
about the inventor of the Wireless Telephone and
'firewire,' is planned to premier in
2008."
Part
02 The
inventors memorialized will be -- N.B.
Stubblefield, Marconi, Ambrose Fleming, Reginald
Fessenden, Tesla, DeForest, Armstrong,
Alexanderson, and Farnsworth, the respective
inventors and patent holders of various Wireless
Telephone, telegraphy and television devices, since
1882. SEE MORE STORY -
Wireless
Cemeteries.
3.
Editor's Note
/ 2 Senators back Cable
TV over Telephone Companies, DSL Internet-based TV
services via fiber-optic
networks
Two leading U.S. senators
sided with the cable TV industry on February 3,
2006, on rules that would govern the introduction
of competing video services by telephone companies
such as Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T
Inc.
The phone companies want
federal rules that let them add TV service without
having to get permission from every municipality
first. Sens. Conrad Burns (R-Mont.) and Daniel K.
Inouye (D-Hawaii) said the power to grant licenses
should remain in the control of states and cities,
within certain federal
limits.
Local control may make it
harder and potentially more costly for AT&T and
Verizon, the two largest U.S. telephone companies,
to roll out Internet-based TV services that would
compete with cable companies such as Comcast Corp.
The phone companies have spent billions of dollars
to build high-speed fiber-optic
networks.
"The desire for a process
facilitating swift entry should not result in a
blank check for would-be competitors" to cable TV,"
Burns and Inouye said in issuing a set of
video-franchising "principles"
Friday.
Anaheim, California made it
easier for AT&T to install a fiber network to
deliver pay TV. Mayor Curt Pringle said that
AT&T would not be held to a franchise agreement
to upgrade its system and deliver
programming.
Burns, a senior member of
the Senate Commerce Committee, and Inouye, who is
co-chairman of the panel, said Congress should
speed up the local licensing process for companies
entering the pay-television
market.
Their proposal differs from
a bill by Republican Sen. John Ensign of Nevada,
who chairs the Senate Commerce technology
subcommittee. Ensign's bill, introduced in July,
would enable pay-TV companies to bypass the state
and local licensing
process.
The Burns and Inouye
proposal would subject cable and television
companies to similar video licensing rules without
eliminating the role of state and local
authorities.
Under the plan, a cable
company could adopt the same terms and conditions
for its local franchise as those negotiated by a
new competitor in that
market.
Verizon Senior Vice
President Peter Davidson and AT&T spokeswoman
Claudia Jones said the proposal would make it more
difficult for new competitors to enter the TV
market.
The recommendations
"perpetuate the status quo, forcing new entrants
into negotiations with thousands of entities, and
resulting in thousands of different sets of rules"
for Internet-based video deployment, Jones said in
an e-mailed statement. "Competition will be delayed
and consumer choice
unrealized."
Kyle McSlarrow, president of
the National Cable & Telecommunications Assn.,
a cable industry group, welcomed the plan. "These
principles strike an appropriate balance between
the desire to speed entry for new providers and
ensure a level playing field for all competitors,"
McSlarrow said in an e-mailed
statement.
Senate Commerce Committee
Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) has scheduled a
Feb. 15 hearing on television licensing issues.
Melanie Alvord, a spokeswoman for Stevens, said he
had not endorsed a video-franchising proposal and
was working to develop a bill that would reflect a
consensus of the
committee.
Josie
Cory
Publisher/Editor
TVI Magazine
TVI
Magazine, tviNews.net, YES90, Your Easy Search,
Associated Press, Reuters, BBC, LA Times, NY Times,
VRA's D-Diaries, Industry Press Releases, They Said
It and SmartSearch were used in compiling and
ascertaining this Yes90 news
report.
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tviNews S90 102
TVInews / FCC Commitment to Cable and Fiber TV and
Wireless Cemeteries. and the FCC WiFi
"Teléph-on-délgreen" Wireless Video
Telephone Systems in Major Cemeteries Around the
World.
The NBS Movie, Charles Portz, Melody
Jensen..
NEWS
Convergence - 06 Week of 2006 Winter
Issue
/ Television
International Magazine's Person Of The Week POWeek
/ Feature
Story / 102WirelessCemeteriesFCC.htm
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