Last seen: May 31, 2026
A lot of these sellers don't know what they're selling. And even if they do, their understanding of English is suspect. This radio and similar ones...
Well, 1720 Khz is in the 160 meter (wavelength) band, which is 524 feet when converted. You have to take the specs with a grain of salt, particularly...
I agree with you that copyright has gone too far. But that always happens when money is involved. It is indeed the root of all evil. Just look at ...
Maybe I didn't express myself clearly enough, but I did mean exactly that. I wasn't suggesting that you could extract music from the film and it woul...
One more thing (or several, actually). For those countries that belong to the Geneva Convention, there's something called The Rule of the Shorter Te...
Joel Whitburn publishes lists of billboard charting hits all the way back to the 1800's. These lists are invaluable for researching copyright status ...
Too bad that Canada doesn't have something similar.
It could be that the AI is getting mixed up between the original music, say, back in 1929, with one of the many derivative works that may have been co...
Yeah, the fair use policy in the U.S. only applies for education and non commercial uses.
Not terribly surprising, considering that unlike licensed stations, most pirates are not corporations that you can go after legally, but individuals w...
I guess it would depend on when the modification was done. If back when the transmitter was sold or shortly after, then it would definitely be in th...
Doubt that many amateur radio operators would do the conversion to 1710 (maybe 1.8 to 2Mhz for the 160m ham band). Most hams are pretty strict about ...
