Abstract
DURING the summer of 1947, a series of International Telecommunication and Radio Conferences were held at Atlantic City, U.S.A., and the proceedings and conclusions of these have recently been published from the headquarters of the International Telecommunications Union at Berne, Switzerland. The object of these conferences was to revise the radio-communication regulations and the convention last formulated at Cairo in 1938 (see Nature, 141, 195 ; 1938), and to re-plan the allocation of radio frequencies for the many and varied applications in use at the present time. A summary of the findings of the Atlantic City Conferences, which were attended by nearly thirty British delegates under the leadership of Sir Stanley Angwin, is given in the April issue of the Wireless World.
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International Aspects of the Radio-Frequency Spectrum. Nature 161, 863 (1948). https://doi.org/10.1038/161863a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/161863a0
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