(You
MAY need the FREE QuickTime
plug-in to view and hear s90tv) top top top top top "PAY
AS YOU PLAY"
WIRELESS" 102 / Internet TODAY'S
PUZZLE? This
Week's
Cover
Dear Editor LookRadio 120
PIXELS 3 columns Part
02
/ Under
today's WiFi conditions, and a few modifications,
the 1907 NBS mobileTele could create the same
wireless WiFi "HotSpots" -- that carry billions of
VoIP messages and radio-television streams over the
Internet and through space everyday. 3.
Editor's Note
/ By 1892,
Nathan's vibrating phone evoluted to an RF hand
held wireless telephone with an antenna, that could
transmit voice through the atmosphere to a
companion receiver. At that time, only one year
before Bell telephone patent was to expire, the
only converging distinct mediums of
telecommunications were telegraphy and telephony
over land-lines. "PAY
AS YOU PLAY"
WIRELESS" More
Articles Converging
News 242006 / TeleCom BuyOuts, Spinoffs and Asset
Seizure Boom FOR
NATHAN STUBBLEFIELD BIO AND
TIMELINE Respectfully
Submitted top top top 40 40+110+570=720
- 102 smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/2406/102NBSGlobalHotSpotsWiFi.htm/
![]()
Movies
![]()
CLICK
S90
Google
IMAGES
GOOGLE
TVInews
- 102 The Nathan Stubblefield Antenna and Aerials.
What Big Changes Took Place in the atmosphere
between 1892 - 2006. The effect of the Wireless
Telephone . . . / "Pay -- or No Wireless For
You," was the moto in
1904.

Photos:
Nathan B. Stubblefield, NBS, 1902 envisioned
his wireless radio telephone as a marketing tool.
Charge -- a monthly fee for a two-way interactive
phone service, connected to land-lines, like todays
cable pipeline into the home and office, and a --
one-way broadcasting for listening only service for
radio programing. Photo: L - GPO Wireless
Investigation Service dectector vans, c 1920.
Bottom Photos NBS family at Telephon del
green and Radio Speaker.
"Pay
-- or No Wireless For You," was the moto in 1904.
In the photo above, two detection vans with
loop aerials on the roof and a General Post Office
(GPO) 'Wireless Investigation Service' logo on the
side. The poster says 'Warning: Is Your Wireless
Licensed?' Men are adjusting the roof aerials. Some
of these vans were used by Post Office engineers to
test subscribers' mains lines for interference.
Most of the vans had standard bodies but from 1948,
the Morris vans used for this purpose were fitted
out as mobile offices with equipment to detect
interference and unauthorized transmissions. The
lettering on the cab door was applied to a
removable metal plate to allow these vans to
operate anonymously. The government first
introduced
radio licence fees in 1904, and these were not
abolished until 1971. CLICK
FOR MORE ABOUT RF
AERIALS.

MORE
ABOUT RF AERIALS.
MORE
/ PHOTO IMAGES
1.
Feature Story
/ What
Big Changes Took Place between 1892 to 2006 -- that
might be causing Global Warming - Part
2?
Hong
Kong
Triad
/
"Jockey Club"
Follow
The
Money
RadioPlayMusic
ABOUT ANTENNA'S / Basic Antenna Theory Radio waves
are generated by electrons accelerating in the
antenna. Antenna power supply for wireless radio
telephones either comes from batteries or
alternating current genterators.
http://www.sub-tv.co.uk/antennatheory.asp
Consider a transmitter perpendicular to the ground.
The electrons in the antenna, when a signal is
applied, the electrons are changing their
velocities continuously, (i.e. moving up and down
very quickly) -- in response to the applied
signal.
For a station that broadcasts at a wavelength of
1500m, the antenna needs to be 750m long. This is
because there is a 'virtual antenna' effect being
created underground, caused by the aerial being
earthed, (grounded) in the ground to create a
circut. CLICK FOR MORE About sub-TV and the
EditorOther Pages The Physics of Aerial Design - an
Introduction Have you ever wondered why radio and
television aerials are the shape and size that they
are? This introduction is a brief guide.
Why all this bother about a ground connection?
Stubblefield saw the moist earth in his melon
patch, as the other half of the continuous power
source to transmit voice through space to a
companion receiver. The better the connection you
make to a moist conductive ground area power
source, the more signal will flow through your
wireless apparatus, and the clearer the voice and
music, could be heard!
But how did Nathan plug his RF circuit - the
transmitter/receiver combo into space and ground at
the same time?
Well, the atmospheric space connection, of course,
was made by his antenna. His array of antennas
gathered as many RF signals as was possible to give
his NBS mobileTele, the transmitter/receiver, the
best voice clarity. The ground connection was made
in several different ways.
His RF receiver, the NBS mobileTele, pictured above
with the loop aerial, was in essence one part of a
circuit that was integrated into a battery power
source. In this case, though, the power source is
the radio signal you wish to resolve.
But how could a potential exist when the entire
signal flows through the air?
The question speaks for itself! The radio energy is
almost all in the space around the NBS mobileTele
transmitter/receiver. Almost none of it is in the
ground. The potential exists, therefore, between
the air and the ground.
But how did he plug - the NBS mobileTele, (the
circuit) into the air and ground at the same
time?
Nathan used a iron stake or rod into the ground and
connected this to the NBS mobileTele's ground
terminal, or he would use his black box he labeled
as, "BSx" -- filled with a moist mixture of salt
and iron chips, with his electrolytic coil buried
in between the iron oar particles. The loophole in
this RF circuitry, was his loop antenna. "BSx" was
the acronym for his son, Bernard.
He could have grounded his NBS mobileTele, to the
little screw on the wall socket, but of course, in
1892 to 1908, electricity was not commonplace. In
today's world, the electrical wall socket is a
moderately good ground for 60 Hz AC. It can
literally appear as an open connection at radio
frequencies, but relying on the socket as your
ground is like making no ground connection at
all!
For the best ground, do what NBS did. Driving a
copper rod into the moist earth mixed with salt and
iron ore, and a whole watermelon containing an NBS
electrical water battery was a good ground
connection, a great RF detector and very
conductive.
In the
1892-1913 NBS mobile radio world era, it was the
mobile telephone, a RF transmitter, microphone,
earphones and antenna. To communicate with another
party, a companion NBS mobileTele was needed to
conduct a two-way RF conversation. To listen, only
a receiver and speaker was needed to hear the RF
voice conversation. A switchboard with a phone
number was needed to connect calls from the NBS
mobileTele -- to land-line
customers.
CLICK FOR MORE WiFi Antenna
Story
"Right now, today, broadcast television and
broadband are distinct mediums
but that is
quickly converging," said Troy, of VRA
TelePictures, who created some of the earliest
Internet television programming and portals at
LookRadio and Xingtv.com in the early 90s.
1991 was the time of the first wave of online
Timbuck 2 television, and streaming audio/vidio
from Murray, Kentucky to Pasadena, California. His
2000 Webcast from Harbin, China fell short of
expectations due to Government restrictions, "bad
buffering" and screens "the size of a postage
stamp." SEE
HARBIN
CHINA
WEBCAST.
WHO
WAS THE FIRST TO HEAR A RF PRODUCED VOICE
TRANSMISSION?
In 1892, it was the 17-year-old Rainey T. Wells (b.
Dec. 25, 1875, d. June 15, 1958) who attentively
heard his first words over the first NBS wireless
telephone, at Teléph-on-délgreen, now
Murray State University.
MORE
ABOUT RF AERIALS.
MORE
/ PHOTO IMAGES
GRANDPA
NAT
PART
01
PART
02
PART
03
PART
04
SEE
KENTUCKY GOVERNOR'S
PROCLAMATION
Flying Machine patent. CLICK
TO SEE MORE STORY.
CLICK
TO SEE MORE STORY.
and
CLICK
TO SEE MORE STORY.
As for Fessenden, in 1928, the same year
Stubblefield died, and one year after his patent
expired, Fessenden was paid over $2.5 million after
a prolonged lawsuit against the Radio
Trust, which included RCA, AT&T, GE and the
Western Electric Company. CLICK TO SEE MORE
STORY. - 109ReginaldFessendenWins1928
CLICK
TO NBS STUDY ON REGULATORY
SEIZURE.
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, SmartSearch, and Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia were used in compiling and
ascertaining this Yes90 news
report.
©1956-2007.
Copyright. All rights reserved by: TVI
Publications, VRA TelePlay Pictures, xingtv and Big
Six Media Entertainments. Tel - 323
462.1099.
GOOGLE
KudoADS
We Preserve The Moment
Yes90
tviNews S90
102 The Nathan Stubblefield Antenna and Aerials.
What Big Changes Took Place in the atmosphere
between 1892 - 2006. The effect of the Wireless
Telephone . . . / "Pay -- or No Wireless For
You," was the moto in 1904.
/
Feature
Story / 102NBSGlobalHotSpotsWiFi.htm
/
Smart90, lookradio, nbs100, tvimagazine, vratv,
xingtv, Ddiaries, Soulfind, nbstubblefield,
congming90, chinaexpo, vralogo, Look Radio, China
Expo, Soul Find, s90tv, wifi90, dv90, nbs 100,
Josie Cory, Publisher, Troy Cory, ePublisher, Troy
Cory-Stubblefield /
Kudoads,
Photo Image665, Movies troy cory show
duration:medium:free - 4
min
- Television With No Borders
How
Do We Do Business?
Tel
323 462-1099
SEND
E-MAIL
Return
To
Top