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ARRL launches events app for Dayton Hamvention
βIt includes Hamvention's full program. You can browse and schedule the forums, preview the extensive list of exhibitors and find all the events that are happening. During the event, you can use the app features to follow along the hourly prize drawings populated by the Dayton Hamvention Prize Committee and browse building and site maps so you can find exactly what you're looking for in all of that complex.β
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FCC mandates US-based testing for imported electronic devices
βThe Commission will review an order this month that bans device testing conducted by labs that are, quote, owned or controlled directly by entities that pose national security risks. According to a statement by FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr, he identified China as one example of such a country. He said it was important that US-based laboratories begin to take on the responsibility to certify such equipment.β
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Brazil removes Morse code requirement for amateur licensing
βBrazil's telecommunications regulator, ANATEL, has two big changes planned for the nation's hams. The Brazilian regulator will no longer require Morse code for amateur licenses under the changes that have been under consideration since 2020. The resolution also grants hams the ability to operate on citizens' band 11 meter frequencies. They must identify with their call signs and are limited to 10 watts of power.β
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ARDC grant extends Digital Library of Amateur Radio funding
βK. Savatz, Kilo 6 Kilo Juliet November, the library's curator, said in the Zero Retries newsletter that the funding will permit the free library's continued operation for another two years. Phase two of the library's operation will include acquiring and digitizing material from the California Historical Radio Society and the SPARC Museum of Electrical Innovation. The library's most recent acquisitions include the Wireless Institute of Australia's Amateur Radio Magazine.β
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National Radio Conference of 1922 addressed broadcastingβs rise
βThis week, Will takes us aboard the Wayback Machine to 1922, where we find despite several attempts, no successor to the outdated 1912 radio law had yet emerged. Now it could wait no longer since things had changed so radically with the rise of broadcasting. In early March 1922, Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover convened the first national radio conference in Washington.β
