View allAll Photos Tagged Telephony
1938 telephone exchange connected to contemporary telephony network (by Graham Harwood, Richard Wrights and Matsuko Yokokoji at mainfesta7 in Bolzano)
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Baker, Nicholson, VOX, Random House, 7th, (eavesdrop on telephonic pair commencing mutual seduction; increasingly impassioned levels of self-disclosure)
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Looking over early historical papers of Oliver A. Wycoff, who made round the world trip with U.S. Navy in 1905 using first arc wireless telephone made by De Forest.
left to right, Joel Michaels, Elmo N. Pickerill, Harold W. Warren, Lee De Forest, Charlie B. Cooper, Oliver A. Wycoff.
Historical Photograph from The Ed. G. Raser (W2Z1) Historical Collections on The Art of Wireless Or Radio Telegraphy, Radio Telephony and the Wire (MORSE) Telegraph Systems, Trenton, N.J.
Chris Mason of Comet Systems Ltd (center) receives his certificate of completion for participating in the June 2011 Xorcom USA Certified Reseller training course from instructors Bill Soto (left) and Ross Ryding (right).
Communication gear—FM and TV transmission, mobile telephony, and microwave connections—atop Faloria Mountain overlooking Cortina d'Ampezzo in Italy's Dolomites. On this tower, parabolic microwave antennas.
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
This model of Bell's first telephone is a duplicate of the instrument through which speech sounds were first transmitted electrically, 1875.
Museum of Independent Telephony,
Abilene, KS
Radio Kootwijk is a small town in the Dutch municipality of Apeldoorn, with (in 2006) ca. 120 inhabitants. It is situated in a heather- and forest-rich territory in the Veluwe region, east of the sandhills of the Kootwijkerzand and the town of Kootwijk.
The housing accommodations of Radio Kootwijk arose as a result of the building of a shortwave transmitter site with the same name, starting in 1918. The transmitters played an important role in the 20th century as a communication facility between the Netherlands and its then colony of Dutch East Indies. In 1923 Dutch PTT started trans-oceanic telegraphy using a longwave transmitter (a 400KW high frequency alternator) from the German Telefunken company under the callsign PCG, in the 24 kHz and 48 kHz. By 1925 the longwave transmitter was changed by a shortwave tube based, electronic transmitter which had a much better performance due to the better propagation of shortwaves. With this new technology, in 1928 a radio-telephonic connection was established. At the end of World War II, the German occupying forces blew up the transmitter. Afterward some of the radio towers were rebuilt.[1]
Due to the development of new technologies like satellite communication, Radio Kootwijk lost its position as main overseas wireless connection point of the Netherlands. In 1980, the last transmission mast was blown up. In 2004 the park lost its last transmitter functions, and was transferred from the KPN company (successor to PTT) to the State Forestry Commission, which started attracting new buyers. The main building of the former transmitter park, designed by Dutch architect Jules Maria Luthmann and named 'Building A' or 'The Sfynx' (journalist refer to it as a cathedral, which it is not), was officially appointed as a monument. It was used as scenery for the American film Mindhunters in 2004.
Sepia processing of the HDR picture "Hier Radio Kootwijk. The jetstream in the picture doesn't add up with the time this picture implies,but i thought this would make a nice picture anyway.......
Communication gear—FM and TV transmission, mobile telephony, and microwave connections—atop Faloria Mountain overlooking Cortina d'Ampezzo in Italy's Dolomites.
From the shooting of a TV commercial EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW HEREconceived by my company, for the launch of fixed telephony and Internet by WIND telecom in Greece, using the cast of one of the most successful local TV series ever , "Para pente"
That the real innovation in mobile telephony lies not in the eagerly anticipated latest iPhone models but rather in mini-factories in the Chinese hi-tech hub, Shenzhen (where iPhones too are produced), is amply demonstrated by the group DISNOVATION.ORG.
In collaboration with researcher Clément Renaud and Hongyuan Qu, the artists Nicolas Maigret and Maria Roszkowska collected strikingly designed mobile phones in Shenzhen, which took such fantastic forms as strawberries or cars, or had impressive technological features. The Powerbank phone, for instance, runs up to three SIM cards in parallel and has an integrated battery that can charge other devices. Others have an in-built lighter or electric razor. This market is geared not so much to the Western middle-classes as to the rural populations of Africa or inland China. Set up as a typical sales stand, 'Shanzhai Archeology' presents the product range of these mini-companies, which fuse creativity, copy/piracy/remix-ventures and self-taught skills to develop new products in a matter of weeks. However, Shanzhai (Chinese: pirate) culture is under threat - not so much from miserable working conditions as from the Chinese government's endeavours to clean up the country's counterfeiter reputation. Yet, although often dissed for poor quality, the devices on show here, given their extraordinary qualities and style, pose a serious challenge to the West's hyper-standardised approach to technology and to the built-in obsolescence paraded under the guise of innovation.
Conception: DISNOVATION.ORG (With Clément Renaud & Yuan Qu)
Bill Soto - Xorcom USA (left), Philip Young (second from left) and Steve Young - Young Corporation second from right) and Ross Ryding - Digital Ocean (right).
Young Corporation has a Xorcom CompletePBX installed in Atlanta GA, London UK and Indonesia. All are networked together with over 40 remote phones for their sales people all over the world. They distribute office furniture.
The tower is ASR 1275846, standing on a hill in French Lick, Indiana, with the recursive address "French Lick Tower." It was built in 2010, and is owned by Smithville Telephone, Inc., a family owned company of long standing that also specializes in fiber optic service to homes. I don't see anything that yells "telephony" at me here. All the cellular providers are on three towers on higher sites across town. But on it is W269BU, a translator on 101.9 FM of WFIU/103.7, of Bloomington.
The top of this tower looks like it was rigged for an FM antenna, but I don't know what Smithfield has, or had, in mind.
Details about both:
Tower:
Registration Number: 1275846
File Number: A1204661
FAA Issue Date: 06/24/2009
Status: Constructed
Date Constructed: 11/03/2010
Structure Coordinates: 38-32-59.3 N 86-37-36.5 W (NAD 83)
Structure Address: French Lick Tower
Structure City: French Lick, IN
Structure County: Orange County
Site Elevation: 220.6 meters (724 ft)
Height of Structure: 79.5 meters (261 feet)
Overall Height Above Ground: 79.5 meters (261 feet)
Overall Height Above Mean Sea Level: 300.1 meters (985 feet)
Station:
Effective Radiated Power: 0.038 kW
Transmitter Output Power: 0.116 kW
Antenna Center HAAT: 65.1 m Horiz.; 0 m Vert.
Antenna Center AMSL: 252 m (827 ft.)
Antenna Center HAG: 31 m (102 ft.)
Site Elevation: 221 m. (725 ft.)
Height Overall*: 80 m (262 ft.)
"Scatola di protezione" (surge protection box) of "San Michele" (mount Skofnik) former command post telephonic lines.
Skype icon added (is this fair use?).
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
That the real innovation in mobile telephony lies not in the eagerly anticipated latest iPhone models but rather in mini-factories in the Chinese hi-tech hub, Shenzhen (where iPhones too are produced), is amply demonstrated by the group DISNOVATION.ORG.
In collaboration with researcher Clément Renaud and Hongyuan Qu, the artists Nicolas Maigret and Maria Roszkowska collected strikingly designed mobile phones in Shenzhen, which took such fantastic forms as strawberries or cars, or had impressive technological features. The Powerbank phone, for instance, runs up to three SIM cards in parallel and has an integrated battery that can charge other devices. Others have an in-built lighter or electric razor. This market is geared not so much to the Western middle-classes as to the rural populations of Africa or inland China. Set up as a typical sales stand, 'Shanzhai Archeology' presents the product range of these mini-companies, which fuse creativity, copy/piracy/remix-ventures and self-taught skills to develop new products in a matter of weeks. However, Shanzhai (Chinese: pirate) culture is under threat - not so much from miserable working conditions as from the Chinese government's endeavours to clean up the country's counterfeiter reputation. Yet, although often dissed for poor quality, the devices on show here, given their extraordinary qualities and style, pose a serious challenge to the West's hyper-standardised approach to technology and to the built-in obsolescence paraded under the guise of innovation.
Conception: DISNOVATION.ORG (With Clément Renaud & Yuan Qu)
The tower is ASR 1275846, standing on a hill in French Lick, Indiana, with the recursive address "French Lick Tower." It was built in 2010, and is owned by Smithville Telephone, Inc., a family owned company of long standing that also specializes in fiber optic service to homes. I don't see anything that yells "telephony" at me here. All the cellular providers are on three towers on higher sites across town. But on it is W269BU, a translator on 101.9 FM of WFIU/103.7, of Bloomington.
This appears to be the over-the-air antenna for picking up WFIU on 103.7 for the transmitting antenna below to translate out on 101.9.
Details about both the tower and the station:
Tower:
Registration Number: 1275846
File Number: A1204661
FAA Issue Date: 06/24/2009
Status: Constructed
Date Constructed: 11/03/2010
Structure Coordinates: 38-32-59.3 N 86-37-36.5 W (NAD 83)
Structure Address: French Lick Tower
Structure City: French Lick, IN
Structure County: Orange County
Site Elevation: 220.6 meters (724 ft)
Height of Structure: 79.5 meters (261 feet)
Overall Height Above Ground: 79.5 meters (261 feet)
Overall Height Above Mean Sea Level: 300.1 meters (985 feet)
Station:
Effective Radiated Power: 0.038 kW
Transmitter Output Power: 0.116 kW
Antenna Center HAAT: 65.1 m Horiz.; 0 m Vert.
Antenna Center AMSL: 252 m (827 ft.)
Antenna Center HAG: 31 m (102 ft.)
Site Elevation: 221 m. (725 ft.)
Height Overall*: 80 m (262 ft.)
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Creative Valley offices, Papendorp, Utrecht, The Netherlands - Monk Architects - 2010
A work environment has diversity, mutual dependence, individual growth and movement. This requires a building which adapts to the requirements of the ecosystem. The ability to move is essentially the sum of bits, bricks and brains. The building must have a clean climate to prevent illness and be good for the climate as a greater whole. It must offer smart spaces attuned to the pace of work and the various work moments. This is supported by high-end technology like WIFI-network and wireless IP telephony. The innovative way of working must be guarded and protected, both literally as in a human guiding way, because the transition from traditional work to innovative work is a journey. Creative Valley is designed to embody all of this. Floor area: 5200 m2 .
1927, Hubbell & Benes
This building inspired the creators of the Superman comic series in their design of the fictional "Daily Planet" building.
The building, shortly after its opening, was nicknamed "The Temple to Telephony".
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York
Photos from the SIP Network Operators Conference (SIPNOC) held in June 2012 in Reston, VA, USA.
For more information, please visit www.sipnoc.org/
Permission is granted to use the photo in other content provided that a link is made back to the photo here.
If you are in the photo and wish a copy of the original image file, please contact Dan York