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Electronics Physics Quiz

Electronics Physics Quiz, March 1974 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteRobert Balin created many quizzes for Popular Electronics magazine during the 1960s and 1970s. Topics included series circuits, electrochemistry, electronic analogy, electronic coupling, electronics analogy, audio, electronic units, capacitor circuits, AC circuit theory, magnetic phenomena, electronics geography, electronic noise, plugs and jacks, electronic switching, diodes, and many more. This "Electronics Physics Quiz" is the 59th that I have posted. It challenges you to name the effects that were first noticed as the result of unexpected actions during laboratory experiments. Many of the names, as you might expect, eponymously honor their progenitors. My score was 80%...

Measurements with Scattering Parameters

Measurements with Scattering Parameters - RF Cafe WebsiteJoe Cahak, owner of Sunshine Design Engineering Services, has submitted another fine article for posting here. Joe has many years of automated RF testing experience to leverage when writing this paper on making measurements with scattering parameters (S-parameters) involved. He begins, "In many RF and Microwave measurements the S-Parameters are typically expressed in dB (decibels) Magnitude units and Degrees in the polar coordinate system. Network and Vector Network Analyzers and Spectrum Analyzers all measure with voltage ratio measurements, so to convert to dB in terms of volts we must use the following equation. The Spectrum Analyzer is a frequency discriminating detector that detects the voltage for the signal. It will give the amplitude of signal as a function of frequency. It is scalar in measurement dimension magnitude...

Anatech Electronics June Newsletter 

Anatech Electronics June 2026 Newsletter - RF CafeSam Benzacar, of Anatech Electronics, an RF and microwave filter company, has published his June 2026 Newsletter that, along with timely news items, features his short op-ed titled "Millimeter-wave 5G: Physics Didn't Get the Memo." In it, Sam discusses how the wireless industry's present-day talk regarding millimeter-wave 5G operating above 24 GHz sounds a lot like the big plans it had for ubiquitous gigabit connectivity with micro base stations located on every street corner that would assure continuous coverage. It never materialized. The physics issues with above-24-Ghz path loss, shadowing, handset (i.e., phone) construction, etc., will greatly affect the service's usefulness. New items include SpaceX telling the FCC to scrap its Rural...

An Electric Wristwatch

Electric Wristwatch, February 1958 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteThe world's first electric wristwatch went on sale on January 3, 1957 - the Ventura model, by Hamilton Electric, and it retailed for $200. I use the event as the theme of the RF Cafe logo for that day in history. Unlike today's electric watches which use a crystal for timing, the early watches used a pulsed motor to energize the balance wheel coil, in place of a mainspring and an escapement mechanism. Some "atomic" wristwatches today like the Casio Waveceptor (<$40) use the WWV signals from Boulder, Colorado, to synchronize the time with world standards. The watch shown in this article from the February 1958 edition of Radio-Electronics magazine is a model 500, which you can find more detail about on the Unique Watch Guide website...

His Mentor's Mentor Was Major Armstrong

Frequency Modulation Fundamentals, August 1939 QST - RFCafeRF Cafe visitor Mike M. sent this very interesting note after reading this "Frequency Modulation Fundamentals" article: Again, you hit it out of the ballpark, Kirt! Great article out of QST magazine. Absolutely accurate to credit "The Old Man" Edwin Armstrong for the invention/development of FM and much more, plus the work of Dan Noble, who worked with the Connecticut State Police and Motorola as Director of Research. Also many, many others. Some that have never been properly credited. Guys like Bob Morris, W2LV and Frank Gunther, W2ALS. They were both interviewed by Ken Burns for "Empire of the Air". I was fortunate enough to talk to both of these guys after I got my Tech license in 1970. My immediate supervisor/mentor from 1972 until he retired in ~1990...

Electronics-Themed Comics, 1954 Radio & TV News

Electronics-Themed Comics, April and September 1954 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteToday has been a busy day, so a couple electronics-themed comics from issues of vintage Radio & Television News magazines help to relieve the stress a bit. I could never figure out why these comics were buried deep inside most issues at the ends of article continuations. These two were on pages 88 and 93. The top one is meant to demonstrate just how obsessed the public was with the relatively new television phenomenon - just look at what they chose to ignore on the display TV in order to get a peek at the inside workings of a television set. The other comic, while clever in its intent, would never pass editorial muster in today's world because of the great hazard it represents...

Mac's Service Shop: Buying and Using a Pocket Calculator

Mac's Service Shop: Buying and Using a Pocket Calculator, May 1974 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteDo you remember your first calculator - electronic, that is (slide rules and abacuses don't count - actually they do, right?)? Mine was acquired sometime in the fall of 1976 during my first attempt at secondary education at Anne Arundel Community College in Maryland, where eventually, in 1987, I was awarded an Associate's degree in Engineering (which constituted the first two years of my eventual BSEE at UVM in 1989, on whose notable alumni list I am not). My name is not in AACC's list of notable alumni, either. But I digress. My calculator was a Texas Instruments model SR-50 that had a small red LED display. It cost about $100 ($445 in today's inflated money...

Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System

Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteYou genius types might not be able to relate to the rest of us who read articles like this one entitled "Fundamentals of Color TV: The NTSC System" and are in awe of minds that conjure such things as the NTSC System and then build, refine, and perfect working hardware. Making the system backward-compatible with existing black and white (B&W) signals added to the complexity and cleverness of the solution - akin but more sophisticated than compatibility of stereo with original mono radio transmissions. When catchy marketing slogans like the familiar (to old folks) RCA television advertisement claim of "Before you see the color ... Your ColorTrak System grabs it, aligns it, defines it, sharpens it, tones it ... and locks the color on track," what it actually means is that a very smart bunch of engineers and scientists spent a lot of time and money designing...

SF Circuits: Military-Grade PCB Manufacturing

San Francisco Circuits -- Military-Grade PCB Manufacturing: Meeting the Highest Standards for Reliability - RF Cafe WebsiteSan Francisco Circuits, a leading printed circuit board fabrication and assembly supplier serving commercial and defense markets, describes how Military-grade printed circuit boards (PCBs) are designed for environments where failure is not an option. Standards like MIL-PRF-31032, MIL-PRF-55110, and MIL-PRF-50884 define stringent requirements for materials, fabrication, testing, and traceability, ensuring boards perform reliably in extreme conditions. These specifications guide engineers and manufacturers in creating PCBs that withstand temperature extremes, vibration, shock, and humidity far beyond commercial standards. MIL-PRF-31032 serves as the modern umbrella specification, covering rigid, flexible...

Coaxial Connectors Quiz

Quiz #79: Coaxial Connectors Quiz - RF CafeWelcome to the RF Coaxial Connectors Quiz, an essential module for any engineer or radio hobbyist focused on maintaining interconnect integrity across their signal chain. Whether you are standardizing your station hardware, troubleshooting high-frequency signal leakage, or verifying the physical port interfaces for your test bench equipment, a thorough understanding of coaxial connector characteristics - from the rugged reliability of the Type N to the precision of the SMA - is vital. This assessment challenges your proficiency in connector selection, exploring the differences in mating mechanisms, cutoff frequencies, constant-impedance geometries, and the practical environmental...

Calls Home from Auto by Short Wave

Calls Home from Auto by Short Wave, August 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteThis could be one of the earliest reports of mobile communications between a private automobile and a home base station. Using a personally designed and installed 5-meter transceiver both at home and in his car, Mr. Wallace is able to talk to his 12-year-old son on the way from work. My guess is that in 1935 there were not too many traffic jams, even in Long Beach, California, so it is doubtful that was the cause for his announced expected later-than-normal arrival home. The article states the automobile power supply needed to produce 300 mA of current at 525 V, which is ~160 W per Ohm's law, which seems unlikely considering car batteries were 6 V at the time, and that would work out to ~26 A. My question is whether little Billy possessed a license permitting him to talk back to dear old dad from the home station...

50 Miles Up - Ionospheric Research

50 Miles Up WAC Corporal, May 1946 Popular Science - RF Cafe WebsitePrior to the International Geophysical Year (aka IGY, which ended up running for a year and a half), spanning from July 1, 1957, through December 31, 1958, not a lot was known about the upper atmosphere. May 1946, when this article appeared in Popular Science magazine, was less than a year after the end of World War II. During the war a lot was learned about long distance wireless (radio) communications between and across continents and ship to shore. Scientists theorized about the phenomenon of charged particles at high altitudes which, being electrically conductive, could reflect electromagnetic signals so that over the horizon signals could be exchanged. Coincidence with sunspot activity and aurorae had already been established, but more knowledge was needed. Rocket...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Solar Battery

Bell Telephone Laboratories Solar Battery, April 1954 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteThis photo of Bell Telephone Labs' three scientists, G.L. Pearson, D.M. Chapin, and C.S. Fuller, inventors of the "Bell Solar Battery," reminds me of the very familiar shot of John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley huddled over their point contact transistor in December of 1948. The "battery" terminology is an interesting choice since we normally think of a battery as a charge storage device, but in fact a battery is fundamentally a charge creation device. A secondary battery may be recharged by reversing the depleted chemical (or other) process that generated the initial charge, but it first created the potential via a basic charge separation process. What we today refer to as a solar cell is a form of primary battery that is not rechargeable. Just as some chemical batteries (cells) are reactivated by replenishing the electrolyte, the solar cell is replenished by photons giving up their energy to the semiconductor substrate...

The Saga of the Vacuum Tube

The Saga of the Vacuum Tube, April 1946 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is the final installation of a 22 part series entitled "The Saga of the Vacuum Tube," by Gerald Tyne, that appeared in Radio News magazine in 1946. Part 1 was printed in March 1943. The collective contents, which covered the development of the vacuum tube from its conception to the end of World War I, could have been published as a stand-alone book. Author Gerald F. J. Tyne presented the series to trace the development which took place up to the end of World War I along a particular branch of the network of roads which led to the modern radio tube. He traced the evolution from studies of the interactions between heat and electricity as pursued by the early philosophers and by the physicists who followed them (Lee de Forest, et al). These limitations have been...

RF Cafe's Fresnel Zone Calculator

Fresnel Zone Calculator - RF Cafe WebsiteThere are many online Fresnel Zone calculators. Most do the basic calculation for the maximum radius of the Fresnel Zone for a given frequency and separation between antennas. Some allow you to enter an obstacle's distance from one of the antennas, and its height, then lets you know if the obstacle falls within the Fresnel Zone. Very few plot the shape of the Fresnel Zone, and even less include an obstacle positioned on the plot. Most rare are calculators which take the curvature of the Earth into account. RF Cafe's new online Fresnel Zone calculator handles all those parameters. Check it out...

Understanding Super-Modulation

Understanding Super-Modulation, February 1950 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteA few weeks ago I posted a two-part article on the Taylor super-modulation principle published in Radio & Television News magazine in 1948. It was a newly announced technology at the time and was written by its inventor, Robert Taylor. This piece entitled "Understanding Super-Modulation" appeared a couple years later by another author, John McCord, where he describes how it works , how to tune super-modulation circuits, and how it compares to other modulation methods - all conveniently in "Ham language." Super-modulation is a form of amplitude modulation (AM) that makes use of carrier and/or sideband suppression to achieve greater efficiency. A panadaptor - aka pan-adapter, aka panadapter, aka radio spectrum scope, aka panoramic adapter...

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Barney Turns Inventor

Mac's Radio Service Shop: Barney Turns Inventor, February 1950 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteIt has been a long time since I heard this saying: "Well, they always say that if you want to find out the best and easiest way of doing something, just put a lazy man at the job." Mac McGregor offered that line to his service shop technician Barney - in jest of course - when Barney explains his million dollar invention idea for a fool-proof vacuum tube tester that can be used by just about anyone. Mac's Radio Service Shop creator John Frye often used the monthly techno-drama to introduce some good ideas for new inventions and/or new methods for troubleshooting problems. Somewhere along the line I think I have seen an advertisement for a tube tester that used the automation concept dreamed up by Barney...

An Ex-Ham's Opinion of "No-Code" Test

An Ex-Ham's Opinion of "No-Code" Test, March 1935 Short Wave Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteI tend to be a traditionalist for most things, but do not go out of my way to make trouble for other people who don't appreciate the way things are and have been... as long as, per Thomas Jefferson, "It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." In other words, if your actions cause me no financial or physical harm, I'm not likely to oppose your actions - unless they're illegal. Many older Hams are greatly offended at the FCC for having removed the Morse code requirement in 2005 for obtaining an amateur radio operator's license. They see it as a way to separate the wheat from the chaff, so to speak; that is to say, to maintain a barrier that keeps non-serious aspirants from gaining entry into the ranks of the elite group...

Atwater Kent Model 649 All-Wave 9 Metal Tube Superhet. Radio

Atwater Kent Model 649 All-Wave 9 Metal Tube Superhet. Radio Service Data Sheet, November 1935 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteFor more than a decade, I have been posting these Radio Service Data Sheets for radios and various other audio and visual electronics sets that appeared in vintage electronics magazines. This one for the Atwater Kent Model 649 all-wave, 9 metal tube, superheterodyne console radio set was published in the November 1935 issue of Radio Craft. "All-Wave" radios were popular at the time because they provided access to shortwave bands so listeners could tune in foreign broadband stations - often with the rudimentary built-in antenna. Short Wave Listening was actually a worldwide sport that had its own cadre of enthusiastic participants, including a dedicated magazine entitled Short Wave Listener...

Early Radar Development

Early Radar Development - RF Cafe Cool PicWe read a lot about the early radar system that was in operation at Pearl Harbor in December 1941 when the surprise attack by Japanese naval airplanes decimated the fleet with a 3-hour-long raid beginning at around 8:00 on that sleepy Sunday morning. According to "The Untold Pearl Harbor Radar Story," by C.P. West, the SCR-270B (Signal Corps radio #270, rev B) radar system had a range of 250 miles at an altitude of 50,000 feet. Westinghouse built the system in 1940 following a development contract issued by the Army Signal Corps in 1936. Historical documents report of the three systems on the island, two had been shut down and that with the remaining system, operators Joseph Lockard and George Elliot detected a formation of aircraft about 137 miles out to sea. They were told it was a squadron of B-17s and to not worry about it...

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Homepage Archives - RF Cafe

The RF Cafe Homepage Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this website since 2008 - and many from earlier years. Many thousands of pages of unique content have been added since then.

 

National Union Radio Corporation Tubes

National Union Radio Corporation, March 1944 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe Website"Necessity is the mother of invention," is an oft-heard maxim that is validated continually. Such was the case, as pointed out here in this National Union Radio Corporation ad which appeared in a 1944 issue of Radio-Craft magazine. The development of many new metal alloys was required in order to obtain the kind of performance and reliability needed in ever-evolving electronics products. Already available metals for filaments, coils, grid wires, getters, electron guns and many other constituents of vacuum tubes that are subject to high temperatures (many hundreds of degrees) and mechanical conditions (unequal coefficients of expansion, for example, which can cause stress fractures), were not sufficient for the task. Metallurgists had their work cut out for them...

An Experimental Station on Wheels

An Experimental Station on Wheels, July 1935 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteThe high-tech vehicle you see here was state-of-the-art in 1935 when engineers at the Cruft Laboratory at Harvard University outfitted it to do radio research. The story appeared in QST magazine. The mission of the mobile unit is to enable laboratory equipment to be carried into the field to make observations on various radio phenomena. Clad with copper and chromium fittings, the vehicle contained transmitting and receiving equipment along with various test equipment that included a high stability frequency reference. In the article a "tungar" charger is mentioned. A tungar vacuum tube is a high current rectifier with a tungsten element and an argon gas filler...

Radio Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for January 17th

Radio Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for January 17th, 2021 - RF Cafe WebsiteThis Radio Technology Theme crossword puzzle for January 17th contains only words and clues related to engineering, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical words. As always, this crossword contains no names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie stars, or anything of the sort unless it/he/she is related to this puzzle's technology theme (e.g., Hedy Lamarr or the Bikini Atoll). The technically inclined cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!

Biggest "Portable" Radio

Biggest "Portable" Radio, July 1945 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe Website"Portable" is a matter of perspective when it comes to large systems. Anything that can be put on wheels and moved over land is technically portable, but the speed at which it can be brought into operation once relocated is what really defines whether something is portable or not. To be truly portable, all of the requisite support equipment must travel with it; e.g., electric generators, fuel, water, food, personnel facilities (if needed), etc. The MPN-14 portable airport surveillance radar (ASR) and precision approach radar (PAR) unit I worked on in the USAF truly qualified since it was entirely self-contained and the necessary power generators were supplied by a separate shop within the 5th Combat Communications Group to which I belonged. Other shops provided creature comfort facilities, ground-based and satellite radio communications, tactical air navigation (TACAN), security, and managerial services. A few times each year we had what were called "Healthy Strikes" where claxons would sound in the barracks...

Hi Tide in the Tweeter

Hi Tide in the Tweeter, October 1956 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteBefore the current generation began destroying its hearing with smartphone earbuds, their parents and grandparents (that includes mine) destroyed our hearing with ridiculously powerful loudspeakers, often in boom boxes perched on shoulders right next to the ears (not me). The "concert hall" - or concert auditorium - experience has been long sought-after since recorded music has been available, which has only been about a century. As evidenced by the sudden increase in articles and advertisements in my growing collection of vintage electronics magazines, the early and mid 1950s saw a sudden swell of articles promoting the equally swelling supply of high fidelity (hi-fi) recording and playback equipment hitting the markets. Subjects ranging from homebuilt projects to reports of top end commercially products filled the pages each month. Television saw the same treatment in the late 1950s and early 1960s. All, of course, relied on vacuum tubes - with just enough relatively expensive semiconductors...

Mathematical Puzzles, 1986 Old Farmer's Almanac

Mathematical Puzzles, 1986 Old Farmer's Almanac - RF Cafe WebsiteI finally got around to scanning selected content from the 1986 issue of The Old Farmer's Almanac. The "Old and New Mathematical Puzzles" feature was always my favorite, so that's what is posted first. Difficulty levels are assigned as 1 for the easiest to 5 for the hardest. Solutions are provided for levels 1 through 4, but level 5 (problems 12 through 15) problems were to be mailed in (no e-mail in the day) to vie for a cash prize for providing the "best set of solutions," though I don't know how one solution to these problems can be deemed "better" than another. Problem #5 is interesting in that you must assign a value for the various numerical prefixes and quantities. Sure, we all know what "atto" and "score" are, but what about "crore" and "myriad?"

Coil Coupling Problems

Coil Coupling Problems, November December 1941 Radio Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteWhen you look at the circuit board and/or chassis of a radio set - new or old - you see a lot of components including resistors, semiconductors (and/or vacuum tubes), inductors, capacitors, transformers, switches , potentiometers, shielded cables, shielded compartments, displays, indicator lights, connectors, etc. With the possible exception of some semiconductors (ICs and discretes), the function of just about every component can be discerned by most people who are at all familiar with radio electronics by its location in the circuit, with the exception being inductors and transformers (other than those in the power supply). Inductors and transformers tend to be the least understood and therefor the most mysterious. They are the least likely to bear any identifying marking unless they happen to be encapsulated like a resistor or capacitor. Articles like this one help remove some of unknowns...

Hickok High-Speed Portable Cardmatic Tube Tester

Hickok Model 121 High-Speed Portable Cardmatic Tube Tester, March 1958 Radio & TV News - RF Cafe WebsiteRF Cafe visitor Vince S. saw the "Barney Turns Inventor" episode of "Mac's Radio Service Shop" series recently posted here which told of Barney's idea for a vacuum tube tester that would set all the switches and voltages based on a coded card for the particular tube type. That story appeared in a 1950 issue of Radio & Television News magazine. I don't know when Hickok came out with their first "Cardmatic" tube tester, but as Vince noted in his message to me, the idea might have been borne of John Frye's fictional scenario.  This full-page advertisement for the Hickok Model 121 High-Speed Portable Cardmatic Tube Tester comes from the March 1958 issue of Radio & TV News. A YouTube video of a Model 121 Cardmatic is included below...

The Citizens Radiocommunication Service

The Citizens Radiocommunication Service, March 1945 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteIt's hard to imagine a time when unlicensed radio frequency bands were not the norm, but early in the history of radio, strict spectrum control was necessary in order to prevent unintentional radiation from crappy equipment from interfering with services. Remember that even in the mid 1940s, many, if not most, casual users were cobbling together their own transmitters and receivers from scratch. Transmitter powers were easily high enough to interfere with nearby and distant receivers, but even improperly shielded receiver oscillator ("exciters") could cause interference with a neighbor's nightly Lone Ranger broadcast. Around 1945, the FCC began entertaining the idea of allocating bandwidth for the use of the newfangled "walkie-talkies" that were developed for field communications during World War II. This 460 to 470 MHz band was the first of the Citizens' Bands that eventually...

Fundamentals of Color TV

Fundamentals of Color TV, March 1954 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteQuite a few articles on color television were published in trade and hobby magazines in the 1950s and 1960s as the technology was adopted and fine tuned. The electronic circuitry aspect of transmitting and receiving chromaticity, intensity, synchronization, and audio was impressive, but the science that went into color research was equally amazing. As with so many things we take for granted because someone else did all the hard work of figuring out how to make something work and then making it available to us at an affordable price, the physics of human color perception needed intense study in order to produce a pleasing image on the cathode ray tube (CRT). The key to understanding color is the chromaticity diagram, based in the human tristimulus color space, which is described in detail herein...

New Radio Garage Door Opener

The New Radio Garage Door Opener, September 1933, Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteOnly a couple decades prior to when this article on a newfangled wireless automatic garage door opener appeared in Radio-Craft magazine, there would have been no demand for such a device ... although maybe an automatic horse barn door opener would have been in demand if a battery was available on the coach. Amazingly, the system employed an early, albeit crude, form of both spread spectrum and digital communications in order to trigger the receiver for opening the door. The spread spectrum characteristic of the signal was the natural consequence of using a spark transmitter. A digital 'Morse' code encryption allowed multiple openers to be installed in close proximity. The opener did not have any type of safety sensor to prevent people or things from being crushed, but then it wasn't until sometime around the 1970s that the feature became standard...

Radio Repair in Bed

Radio Repair in Bed, July 1945 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteI learned a new word from this Radio-Craft article: "chemurgic," which refers to chemurgy, the science of creating products such as soybean gear shift knobs and cellulose movie film from agricultural raw components. It has nothing to do with the story other than to describe the town in which the subject, Wesley Rushing, lived. As the title suggests, Mr. Rushing established and thrived at a radio repair business built while confined to bed with a crippling illness. He worked an average of 10 hours per day and repaired two hundred radios each month. Although not a veteran himself due to his sickness, the story was offered as a means of support to the thousands of returning World War II veterans who suffered disabilities in battle. Today's handicapped veterans need and deserve similar encouragement, so if you have a can-do story, please submit it to one of the trade or hobby magazines; it will be greatly appreciated by many...

Bell Telephone Laboratories Salutes 3 New Nobel Prize Winners

Bell Telephone Laboratories Salutes Three New Nobel Prize Winners, February 1957 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteAnyone visiting RF Cafe (other than by accident) almost certainly knows of Drs. Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley fame for their transistor invention while jointly working at the Bell Telephone Laboratories. The trio shared The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956. Bell was so proud of their employees' efforts that they ran full page advertisements to boast of the accomplishment. This one appeared in the February 1957 edition of Radio & Television News. Alas, Ma Bell's moment of glory was a bit diminished by needing to add a footnote admitting that Drs. Bardeen and Shockley no longer work there. Note that while the ad says the transistor was announced in 1948, the first demonstration to Bell managers was in December of 1947...

Promote Your Company on RF Cafe

Sponsor RF Cafe for as Little as $40 per Month - RF Cafe WebsiteBanner Ads are rotated in all locations on the page! RF Cafe typically receives 8,000-15,000 visits each weekday. RF Cafe is a favorite of engineers, technicians, hobbyists, and students all over the world. With more than 17,000 pages in the Google search index, RF Cafe returns in favorable positions on many types of key searches, both for text and images. Your Banner Ads are displayed on average 225,000 times per year! New content is added on a daily basis, which keeps the major search engines interested enough to spider it multiple times each day. Items added on the homepage often can be found in a Google search within a few hours of being posted. If you need your company news to be seen, RF Cafe is the place to be...

Censorship vs. Radio Progress

Censorship vs. Radio Progress, December 1942 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteHaving spent a lot of my career working for defense electronics companies in classified programs, I am somewhat torn between sympathizing with Hugo Gernsback from his perspective as editor of Radio-Craft and what I know is a valid reason for guarding certain technological information for the sake of military advantage. It is often the case that people who have had no exposure to the 'black' side of industry cannot appreciate the need for it. Their argument postulates that suppressing knowledge does more harm than good because an opportunity for more people to gain from breakthroughs will result in more rapid advancement in technology While that is true, the downside is that the enemy rarely feels obliged to reciprocate in the same manner, and will exploit your generosity...

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