VALUES(6,3,1,'2008-01-08','2008-01-08','CC-BY-NC-SA','Part 15 Broadcasting','dosman and zach from the packetsniffers talk about Part 15 Broadcasting which is low power',NULL,'<p>dosman and zach from the packetsniffers talk about Part 15 Broadcasting which is low power broadcasting for the local area. Used to do community radio around an event, a church, concerts etc. They discuss what the regulations are in the US, what you need, how to get started, what things to consider. All in all great introduction to the topic.
<li>SSTRAN AMT3000 part 15 transmitter: <a href="https://www.sstran.com">https://www.sstran.com</a></li>
<li>FCC Low Power Broadcast Radio Stations: <a href="https://www.fcc.gov/guides/low-power-broadcast-radio-stations">https://www.fcc.gov/guides/low-power-broadcast-radio-stations</a></li>
<li>Windows Radio Broadcast software: <a href="https://www.zarastudio.es/en/ ">https://www.zarastudio.es/en/ </a></li>
VALUES(35,1,1,'2008-02-18','2008-02-18','CC-BY-NC-SA','An interview with John Whaley','droops interviews John Whaley from Moka5','Interviews','<p>
droops interviews John Whaley from <a href="https://www.moka5.com/about-us/our-team/john-whaley/"> Moka5.</a>
</p>
<p>
John Whaley is responsible for the technical vision of Moka5. He holds a doctorate in computer science from Stanford University, where he made key contributions to the fields of program analysis, compilers, and virtual machines. He is the winner of numerous awards including the Arthur L. Samuel Thesis Award for Best Thesis at Stanford, and has worked at IBM’s T.J. Watson Research Center and Tokyo Research Lab. John was named one of the top 15 programmers in the USA Computing Olympiad. He also holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in computer science from MIT and speaks fluent Japanese.
VALUES(1459,73,1,'2014-03-06',date('now','-14 days'),'CC-BY-SA','Locational Privacy with retrotech-the lowly pager','deepgeek advocates the use of a pager for privacy reasons','Privacy and Security','<p>
In this episode, deepgeek suggests that adding and old, and perhaps laughable
by modern standards, device to your mobile lifestyle. Deepgeek reveals that
said device is the pager, but he eventually gives good reasons for doing so.
</p>
<p>
The primary reason is that the paging company does not know where you are,
so they can''t tell "the man" where you are. Other reasons are redundancy
and trouble interpreting audio. But in the end, you find out why first
responders and medical and fire personal still use these devices, and how you,
as a privacy lover, may reap benefits from using this technology also.
</p>
<p>
Some links mentioned in case you want to follow them...
VALUES(2376,73,0,'2017-09-11',date('now','-3 days'),'CC-BY-SA','Information Underground: 21st Century Superstar','Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about iconless culture','Information Underground','<p>Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about cultural iconography.</p>');
VALUES(3276,73,0,'2021-02-22',date('now','-1 days'),'CC-BY-SA','Deepgeek''s thoughts about HD Radio','Klaatu reads a post by Deepgeek','Information Underground','<p><em>
<li><a href="https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/textfiles/Jason_Scott_Talks_His_Way_Out_Of_It_-_Episode_120.mp3" target="_blank">Jason Scott episode 120</a></li>
</ul>');
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