I have skimmed through the 1922 and 23 issues. These are a real treasure trove of information and early history of radio. Some of the technical topics are still of pertinence to-day. There are topics of interest not only to broadcast listeners, but amateurs as well, including transmitter principles and circuits. Many photos of early broadcast stations, transmitters, antennas and a few ham stations. Some detailed articles regarding patents and copyright, including what appears to be the same exact royalty issue as the one being debated to-day regarding broadcasters playing records over the air.
These PDFs average about 9 MB per issue, and my computer loads each one in less than 15 seconds. I plan to get them all on disc ASAP, since anything on a website may be taken down at any moment without notice, particularly if someone raises a copyright issue, they experience technical difficulty, or the web site owner may just decide to be ornery. The person who went to the trouble to scan those issues should be congratulated because the quality is excellent. Much better than that of the early QSTs on my ARRL CD set. Don k4kyv _______________________________________________________________ This message was typed using the DVORAK keyboard layout. http://www.mwbrooks.com/dvorak/ http://gigliwood.com/abcd/ ______________________________________________________________ Our Main Website: http://www.amfone.net AMRadio mailing list Searchable Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/amradio@mailman.qth.net/ List Rules (must read!): http://w5ami.net/amradiofaq.html List Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/amradio Post: AMRadio@mailman.qth.net To unsubscribe, send an email to amradio-requ...@mailman.qth.net with the word unsubscribe in the message body. This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html