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Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

reply to MrMoody

Re: Ummm, what?

said by MrMoody:

said by nasadude:

Because wireless mic manufacturers and maybe the NFL bitched (er, filed a comment) to the FCC that white spaces devices would interfere with the use of wireless mics and the white space devices had to also avoid the freqs in the 700Mhz band the mics were using (even though most of them are "illegal" users).
OK, but it still doesn't make sense. The WSD should avoid a frequency in use. A mic is using the same frequency as a TV channel. The WSD should avoid that frequency in either case. What's the problem? Are they saying it couldn't detect the frequency in use because two sources are transmitting on it? If so, that's THEIR problem.
I believe he is saying the device failed to detect the wireless mics on frequency X, because they were on Frequency Y, which is TV spectrum, so the WSD didn't look there. When the device failed to detect the wireless mics on frequency X, the opponents of the WSD pointed that out as a failure in the device.

Google is saying the devices couldn't detect the mics on frequency X, because there were none there to detect! (The mics were using the TV spectrum, frequency Y.)
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