Here’s a solid post concept for a blog, social media (LinkedIn or Twitter), or newsletter about — focusing on the value of documenting wireless/spectrum history and key lessons. Title: Why Every Wireless Professional Should Read the Spectrum History Book (Even If It’s Not Yet Written)
If you want to understand where spectrum policy is going, read the history first. What’s the most important lesson from spectrum history that today’s industry is forgetting? Let’s discuss. 👇 Spectrum History Book
If there were a — a real, comprehensive volume — here’s what its chapters would teach us: Here’s a solid post concept for a blog,
#SpectrumManagement #WirelessHistory #5G #Policy #Telecom #Innovation Let’s discuss
But spectrum didn’t start with the FCC’s first license in 1927. It started with spark-gap transmitters, maritime distress calls, and the chaos of unregulated airwaves.
Because every current debate — 6 GHz, open RAN, spectrum sharing, DSA, national spectrum strategy — is a replay of past tensions dressed in new acronyms.
📘 700 MHz (former TV channels), 3.5 GHz (former radar), 6 GHz (incumbent links). Repurposing legacy bands is the real story of wireless progress — more than any single technology.