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Developments in U.H.F.

Developments in U.H.F., March 1955 Radio & Televsion News - RF Cafe WebsiteOnce World War II was over and the peoples of the world could breathe and start enjoying life again, television, which had just begun to take off before the war, quickly gained widespread adoption in homes. As with so many areas of technology and science, advancements in electronics and wireless communications during the war years redounded very beneficially to the TV industry. Early schemes for television combined both electronics and mechanical elements using rotating discs, vibrating mirrors, and other far-out schemes to convert electrical signals to moving pictures. Due to the small size of the first cathode ray tubes (CRTs), commonly called kinescopes...

Crossword Puzzle from the December 1957 Popular Electronics

Crossword Puzzle, December 1957 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is a 1950s vintage crossword puzzle from Popular Electronics magazine. Unlike the weekly crosswords from RF Cafe that use only relevant technical words, this one uses some common words unrelated to electronics and science to fill in where needed. It's still a good puzzle, though. Print it out for use during your next boring meeting or 12-hour flight to China. A list of many other puzzle from Popular Electronics and Electronics World is presented at the bottom of the page. Have fun...

What Ever Happened to TV Channel 1?

What Ever Happened to Channel 1?, March 1982 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteA large percentage of people today do not remember or were not alive during the days of analog over-the-air (OTA) broadcast television, so the question, "What Ever Happened to Channel 1?" is moot for them. For that matter, the standard VHF selector knob beginning with the number 2 and not 1 was probably was never a matter of concern. I do remember wondering why there was no channel 1, but it wasn't until a few years ago that I learned why that was. By that time, the Internet is full of explanations, as is the case for most information you want to know. This article from a 1982 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine lays out the answer to the question in great detail, and provides some interesting history on the development of television broadcast standards...

Electronic Component Reliability Quiz - by RF Cafe

Quiz #83: Electronic Component Reliability - RF Cafe - RF CafeElectronic component reliability is the foundation of every dependable circuit assembly, yet it is often overlooked until a field failure occurs. This quiz covers the dominant failure mechanisms and reliability characteristics of the components that populate real-world boards: resistors, capacitors, inductors, integrated circuits, connectors, power supplies, displays, switches, and knobs. Questions address why certain capacitor types fail short versus open, how derating affects MTBF, what environmental stressors accelerate wear-out, and why connector selection matters more than most engineers realize. You will encounter concepts such as infant mortality, bathtub curves, electrolytic capacitor dry-out...

Hughes Research and Development Laboratories

Hughes Research and Development Laboratories, October 1955 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteWhen I saw this Hughes Research and Development Laboratories employment ad in a 1955 issue of Radio & Television News, I wasn't sure how to take it. The text of the ad makes no reference to the bar graph and the weird drawing. Note the "bottle" is actually a slide rule. The graph can be interpreted to indicate that the more education a person has, the less likely he is to have children. If the typical age of the respondent is in the twenties, then that might reflect how people still in school to earn a higher degree would not be having children. It might also show that people with higher degrees focus more on their careers than on having...

Carl & Jerry: Electronic Detective

Carl & Jerry: Electronic Detective, February 1958 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteLong before their college days at Parvoo U., our two amateur electronics sleuthing buddies were on the job tracking down and trapping bad guys by using their combined knowledge of circuits and physics. In this episode, Carl and Jerry are tasked with helping a hobby store owner stop a rash of thefts that always seems to occur during a busy time right after school lets out for the day. Their first inclination was to devise a system like the big department stores were installing that used passive tags on items that would trigger an indicator when passed through the detector at the exit door. That was in 1958 when the anti-theft tags were first being utilized....

The Backward Diode

The Backward Diode, November 1958 Radio-Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteNot everyone who visits RF Cafe is a seasoned engineer or technician. Some are just getting into electronics as part of a career path and/or hobby endeavor and appreciate the availability of entry-level information. As an oft-quoted sage-type person famously said, "A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step." Accordingly, here is a short article explaining the basic physics and application of the of backward diode, which is akin to a Zener diode and tunnel diode in that it is meant to operate in the reverse bias region. National Semiconductor, Texas Instruments (TI), and Raytheon were the manufacturers in 1958 when this article appeared in Radio-Electronics magazine. National Semiconductor was swallowed up by Texas instruments in 2011...

Many Thanks to Exodus Advanced Communications for Their Support

Exodus Advanced Communications - RF CafeExodus Advanced Communications is a multinational RF communication equipment and engineering service company serving both commercial and government entities and their affiliates worldwide. Power amplifiers ranging from 10 kHz to 51 GHz with various output power levels and noise figure ranges, we fully support custom designs and manufacturing requirements for both small and large volume levels. decades of combined experience in the RF field for numerous applications including military jamming, communications, radar, EMI/EMC and various commercial projects with all designing and manufacturing of our HPA, MPA, and LNA products in-house.

Magnetron, Klystron, and TWT Quiz by RF Cafe

Quiz #81: Magnetron, Klystron, and TWT Quiz - RF CafeMicrowave tubes form the backbone of high-power RF generation and amplification, and this "Magnetron, Klystron, and TWT Quiz" tests your understanding of three fundamental devices. The magnetron, a crossed-field oscillator, dominates applications from radar transmitters to microwave ovens by using a thermionic cathode, an anode block with resonant cavities, and a powerful permanent magnet to generate oscillations directly from a DC supply. The klystron, by contrast, is a linear-beam amplifier that relies on velocity modulation: an electron beam passes through an input cavity, acquires velocity variations that cause it to bunch as it drifts, then induces currents in an output cavity to extract energy with high efficiency and narrowband...

Radio Data Sheet Zenith Model 8H032

Radio Data Sheet Zenith Models 8H032, 8H033, 8H050, 8H052, 8H061, January 1947 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is the Radio Data Sheet for Zenith radio models 8H032, 8H033, 8H050, 8H052, 8H061 as published in a 1947 issue of Radio-Craft magazine. Some of the electronics magazines used to include this type of high level documentation so that hobbyists and even service shops with budgets too small to afford cabinets full of SAMS data packets could work on the radios. Most of the radio manufacturers would not even sell factory-prepared documentation to anyone who was not an "authorized" service center. The RadioMuseum website has nice examples of restored versions of both the Zenith 8H032 and the Zenith 8H034 tabletop radios. The electronics are similar but the chassis designs are completely different...

How to Solder

How to Solder, April 1955 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteProper soldering is almost as much of an art form as it is a technical skill. Having been through numerous soldering classes in my career, starting with electrical vocational courses in high school, then again in USAF technical school, and other times while working as a technician and engineer, I always exercise care in making solder joints. Proper preparation - including both tinning of mating surfaces and a means to prevent the joint members from moving during cool-down - is of utmost importance for assuring a nice, smooth, shiny joint with just the right amount of solder. Lead-free solders do not tend to produce the level of shininess as do the good old 60-40 type tin-lead solders...

The Pied Piper of Hamelin

The Pied Piper of Hamelin, June 1929 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteThis might be my oldest copy of QST, being Vol. XIII, Number 6. Up until a few decades ago, authors commonly appropriated themes and characters from familiar fairy tales and fables for use in articles of instructional nature. Some publications even used comic book style formats for teaching to beginners. The term "wabbulation" (aka "wobbulation" and "wobulation") is spoken to Uncle Jimmy by the fabled Piper, and I have to admit not being familiar with the term. According to W2PA's story, 1920s era QST technical editor Robert Kruse coined the word to describe inadvertent modulation of the carrier frequency during CW or phone operation. Per the Wikipedia entry, "wobulation" is Hewlett-Packard's term...

Raytheon Manufacturing Company

Raytheon Manufacturing Company, July 1955 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteRaytheon is another of the stalwart early American electronics and technology manufacturing company. It began operations in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1922 under the name of the American Appliance Company. The name was changed to Raytheon in 1925 to reflect its growing vacuum tube business. Did you know the name Raytheon means "light from the gods?" In this case, the light refers to the orange glow from the tube heater filament. If you have ever had the privilege of seeing in a darkened room vacuum tubes glowing inside a vintage radio, you will understand the relationship to a godly sight. Not too many years ago, there were still a few companies like Tesslor...

RF Amplifier Quiz

RF Amplifier Quiz - RF Cafe WebsiteWelcome to the RF Cafe Amplifier Quiz, a technical assessment focused on the active components that drive gain and signal chain performance in modern communication systems. Whether you are maximizing the output power of a transmitter, optimizing the noise figure of a receiver front-end, or managing linearity in a complex modulation scheme, a comprehensive understanding of amplifier theory is indispensable. This quiz challenges your knowledge of critical metrics, including gain, noise figure, the 1 dB compression point, Intercept Points (IP2/IP3), and stability factors. By evaluating your grasp of these core principles, you refine your ability to balance power consumption, linearity, and sensitivity...

Your Antenna - Key to World-Wide DX

Your Antenna - Key to World-Wide DX, November 1959 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteHere is a quick course on how to point antennas for over-the-horizon (DX) reception, and, if you also happen to have a license to transmit, for broadcasting. It covers how to determine the shortest straight-line path by stretching a string around a globe (remember those spherical maps that used to be a mainstay of every household and schoolroom?) and using a protractor (a what?) to get the angle. Radio signals unless refracted or reflected take a great circle route from point A to point B. Long distance airline flights take the same routes, which explains why flights from London to Los Angeles fly over Greenland enroute. Author Edward Noll uses a simple 1/2-wave dipole antenna radiation pattern as an example of how directivity is affected by frequency (relative to the fundamental)...

RCA Graphechon Tube

RCA Graphechon Tube ad in the July 8, 1950 Saturday Evening Post - RF Cafe WebsiteEver heard of the revolutionary Graphechon Tube, by RCA? Neither had I, until I saw it mentioned in an ad for RCA televisions in a 1950 edition of The Saturday Evening Post. My curiosity was piqued enough to do some research. First, here is the text of the ad: "Scientists at RCA Laboratories work with split-seconds of time too infinitesimal for most of us to imagine. Their new electron tube, the Graphechon, makes it possible. For instance, in atomic research, a burst of nuclear energy may flare up and vanish in as little as a hundred-millionth of a second. The Graphechon tube oscillograph, taking the pattern of this burst from an electronic circuit, "remembers" what happened - and re-creates it in a slow motion image which can last for a minute and a half. Scientists may then observe the pattern...

For the Record - How Small Can They Get?

For the Record, July 1958 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe Website"It is hard for one to believe that there is room for further reduction in size and weight from what we are accustomed to today." So wrote Radio & TV News magazine editor William Stocklin in 1958. It was a decade after invention of the transistor (1948), and the first integrated circuit had not yet been developed (Robert Noyce, 1959), but even so it seems fairly short-sighted for a major electronics magazine editor. While being amazed at the shirt-pocket-size transistorized radio and hearing aid, he still found hope for the future of miniaturization of vacuum tubes, such as diodes recently released by General Electric that would "fit into the shell of a standard type of transistor." Sure, it is easy in hindsight...

Molecular Electronics

Molecular Electronics, April 1960 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe Website"A transistorized i.f. stage for a TV set can be built today to fit into a match box. But molecular electronics has made possible the production of a device that contains two such stages and is only a fraction of the size of a single transistor!" Nobody talks of molecular electronics today, but that really is an accurate term for what we have when compound semiconductors like GaAs, GaN, or any of the many-atomed exotic photovoltaic substrates are being discussed. When referring to pure elements like silicon that are being doped with impurities, I'm not sure those structures are considered molecules which, according to Dictionary.com, are "the smallest physical unit of an element or compound, consisting of one or more like atoms in an element and two or more different atoms in a compound..."

Today in Science History - RF Cafe Website
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Homepage Archives - RF Cafe

The RF Cafe Homepage Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this website since 2008 - and many from earlier years. Many thousands of pages of unique content have been added since then.

 

Vintage Radio Shack TV Commercials

Vintage Radio Shack TV Commercials - RF Cafe WebsiteThere are still plenty of us around who remember seeing Radio Shack commercials on TV back in the days when all television sets had at least one vacuum tube in them - the CRT (cathode ray tube). As evidenced by the huge number of vintage Radio Shack commercials posted on YouTube, and the amount of views for them, there is still a desire by people to take a nostalgic trip back in time to see the content they remember. Of course at the time we usually considered all commercials an imposition on our TV program watching. One of the annoyances of modern TV programming is that even though you have to pay for the service, you still have to sit through even more commercial time per show than was imposed when reception was free (over the air). I have to be honest and admit that I don't recall ever seeing any of the Radio Shack commercials in this collection of videos, but they definitely have the "look" of the ones I do remember from the days of yore. I used to visit...

General Electric Radio Advertisement

General Electric Radio Advertisement, September 1935 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteWhen metal-encased vacuum tubes came on the electronics scene in the 1930s, they were billed as the innovation that was going to radically change the radio world. The built-in Faraday shield properties of the tubes did in fact stop the effects of cross-coupling between adjacent tubes and permit more densely packed circuits, but they also caused some other problems as well. Capacitance between tube elements and the shield caused electron flow control issues and affected operational frequency. Packing tubes closer together also meant the rat's nest of resistors, capacitors, inductors, and wires on the underside of the chassis that were installed in a point-to-point manner rather than neatly on printed circuit boards (which largely did not exist at the time) were closer together and therefore created new problems due to proximity. Still, metal tubes served a very useful purpose when employed wisely and continued in use along with unshielded tubes...

CapaciQuiz - 1961 Popular Electronics

CapaciQuiz, August 1961 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteRobert Balin, Popular Electronics magazine's quizmeister, created this CapaciQuiz for the February 1961 issue. Most of these are elementary, but think carefully about the exact wording of Q4 before you answer. With Q8, believe the better explanation is that for a purely capacitive circuit, current and voltage are 90° out of phase, so when the sinewave voltage is at zero, the current is at a maximum. Note that Q6 and Q10 are opposites (parallel vs. series capacitor combinations), so if you have trouble reasoning one of the configurations, work on the other and then you'll know both. Bon chance!...

Exit Heterodyne QRM

Exit Heterodyne QRM, October 1947 QST - RF Cafe Website"QRM" is the Q-code in Ham-speak for unwelcomed manmade inband electrical interference. Interference is not just random signals like noise from motor brush arcing, intermittent electric distribution system connections or inter-conductor arcing, etc. An improperly tuned or ineffectively filtered radio transmission, or EM energy leaking from a poorly shielded electronic device is also QRM. I distinguish such noise as unwelcomed because what might be considered as noise by one person could be a desired signal by another. "QRN" stands for electrical noise generated in nature such as lightning bolts, solar storms, or even, as discovered by Drs. Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, the 160 GHz Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation that emanates from all regions of the sky. A mnemonic for remembering which Q-code is which is the trailing "M" for manmade and "N" for natural...

The Yagi Antenna

The Yagi Antenna, October 1952 Radio & Television News Article - RF Cafe WebsiteThe Yagi–Uda antenna (usually referred to as a Yagi), is a relatively simple to construct multielement structure consisting of a combination of driven (director) and reflective (reflector) diploes. Careful phasing of the configuration results in a directional radiation pattern that is used often for long distance (DX) and direction finding work. It is also useful in a dense signal environment where there is a need to exclude received signals not emanating from a preferred source. Common (or what used to be) rooftop television antennas were of the Yagi type and served not just to pull in distant stations, but to help reject multipath signals that would cause ghost images on the screen. The concept is the 1926 brainchild of Messrs. Shintaro Uda and Hidetsugu Yagi, both of the Tohoku Imperial University, in Japan. The Yagi antenna described in this 1952 issue of Radio & Television News magazine is for VHF channels 2-13...

Recent Developments in Electronics

Recent Developments in Electronics, September 1965 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteThe items reported in the September 1967 issue of Electronics World magazine represent the beginning stages of many technologies that are still in used today. The monolithic ferrite memory was a major producibility improvement in what was formally hand-wired toroidal matrices of cores. They were the first step in integrated memory (although we don't use magnets anymore in ICs (just on hard drives). The Electronically Controlled Robot looks like something from a modern Japanese university - without the skin, hair, and eyeballs. Note that as today, supplying power is one of the biggest hurdles in making a human-looking robot (umbilical required). The Solid State Camera "Tube" is one of the very first solid state camera imaging chips. It had a whopping 2,500 pixels. The Computer-Directed Drawing Machine converted a 2-dimensional drawing into a 3-dimensional perspective. Shipboard Satellite Communications was at the time one of the first uses of satellites for global communications, it being a big deal because...

Electronics Themed Comics

Electronics Themed Comics, October 1945 & April 1946 Radio News - RF Cafe WebsiteAre you having a rough week? If so - and even if not - take a few minutes to get a laugh from these electronics-themed comics from the pages of vintage Radio News magazines. Beginning sometime in the late 1930s and early 1940s, single-panel topical comics began appearing frequently in many hobby and even professional magazines. Sure, comics showed up in magazines before that time, but they generally did not necessarily have to do with the main subject of the publication. The Saturday Evening Post, for example, had many single-panel comics, but they were on any random theme. I can't go without commenting on the April 1946 comic since it reminds me of a situation while in tech school at Keesler AFB in Biloxi, Mississippi, in 1979. I can't recall exactly what the circuit was that the instructor was covering, but it involved tuning to achieve a waveform with a null in the center of two bandpass regions similar to this:  ∩∩ . He and everyone I worked with in the field after tech school referred to it as the "Dolly Parton waveform." Such a scenario would never pass muster with the overly sensitive...

Transistor Topics - Heathkit TCR-1, MOBIDIC

Transistor Topics - Heathkit TCR-1, MOBIDIC, April 1960 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteFor many years, Popular Electronics magazine had a monthly column titled "Transistor Topics" that reported on news in the world of those newfangled semiconductors. To wit, this article from the April 1960 edition begins, "Each month, more and more transistorized consumer products are developed as replacements for vacuum-tube designs." The Heathkit TCR-1 clock radio is featured for its six-transistor superheterodyne AM receiver circuit. A mechanical clock is still used since other than using Nixie tubes, digital displays were not commercially available. The MOBIDIC "super" computer is also covered for its total transistorization. At about 4 feet wide and 6 feet tall, it is hard to believe that the "MOB" portion of the acronym stands for "mobile"...

Designing an All-Channel TV Antenna

Designing an All-Channel TV Antenna, February 1966 Electronics World - RF Cafe WebsiteYes, the old days of over-the-air broadcasts and analog television could be a pain. Perfect adjustment of the antenna and TV controls one day could be totally useless the next day or even later the same day. Atmospheric and physical variations can change suddenly and significantly, affecting both radio and television. Proper separation and processing of horizontal and vertical synchronization of the video, color and intensity, and audio by the TV's electronic circuits depended on the right combination of antenna, and lead-in cable. The advent of semiconductors in place of vacuum tubes helped stabilize the television's role in viewing quality and lessened the overall irritation level, and the introduction of cable-based and then satellite-based programming distribution to reduce irritations to the point where most people never had a problem. That said, I would happily return to the days of yore and suffer the aforementioned inconveniences, to enjoy a time when the content was significantly less rude and crude, and patriotic and traditional family-based shows were by far the rule rather than the exception...

Burgess Battery Advertisement

Burgess Battery Advertisement, August 1934 QST - RF Cafe WebsiteThis could be a modern day photo of an American DHS (Department of Homeland Security) or an Israeli IDF (Israel Defense Forces) agent displaying a body bomb found on an attempted suicide bomber after thwarting an attack, but it's not. In actuality, it is a 1934 Burgess battery advertisement that appeared in QST magazine with the intent of demonstrating to Hams the kinds of research the company was doing. This design was called a "ribbon battery," and it could conveniently be wired in a flexible manner with almost any number of series and parallel connections to accommodate required voltage and current combinations, including taps for multiple voltages needed for vacuum tube radios. The packs could be "wrapped about one's body for portable receiver use." Hmmmm, maybe that's what made me think of the body bomb...

FITSAT-1 CubeSat Flight over Erie, PA

FITSAT-1 CubeSat Flight over Erie, Pennsylvania - December 12, 2012 - RF Cafe WebsiteI stayed up late on the night of of December 11, 2012 (early in the morning, actually) to watch the FITSAT-1 CubeSat satellite flash its Morse code "HI DE NIWAKA JAPAN" message via super-bright LEDs over eastern North America. It was scheduled to pass just south of my location in Erie, Pennsylvania, at 1:14 AM, with a lights-on intensity great enough to be easily seen with binoculars. FITSAT-1 is a project conceived of and built by professors and students at the Fukuoka Institute of Technology (FIT) in Japan. In addition to the LED visual display, the satellite also carries several Amateur Radio payloads including a CW beacon on 437.250 MHz, a telemetry beacon on 437.445 MHz and a high-speed data downlink on 5,840.0 MHz. The CubeSat Project was developed by California Polytechnic State University and Stanford University's Space Systems Development Lab. It creates launch opportunities for universities previously unable to access space. A CubeSat is 10 cm on a side and may have a mass of up to 1.33 kg. Launch vehicles sell space to CubeSats for around $40,000, which makes them very affordable to place in orbit...

Wireless Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for August 28th

Wireless Technology Theme Crossword Puzzle for August 28th, 2022 - RF Cafe WebsiteThis custom made Wireless Technology theme crossword puzzle from RF Cafe is for August 28th, 2022. "Across" words consisting of five or more letters begin with the first letter of this puzzle's theme. All RF Cafe crossword puzzles are custom made by me, Kirt Blattenberger, and have only words and clues related to RF, microwave, and mm-wave engineering, optics, mathematics, chemistry, physics, and other technical subjects. As always, this crossword puzzle contains no names of politicians, mountain ranges, exotic foods or plants, movie stars, or anything of the sort unless it/he/she is related to this puzzle's technology theme (e.g., Reginald Denny or the Tunguska event in Siberia). The technically inclined cruciverbalists amongst us will appreciate the effort. Enjoy!

Atwater Kent 305Z Radio Service Data Sheet

Atwater Kent Model 305Z 5-Tube 32 V. D.C. Superhet Radio Service Data Sheet, July 1936 Radio-Craft - RF Cafe WebsiteFor many years I have been scanning and posting schematics & parts lists like this one featuring the Atwater Kent Model 305Z 5-Tube 32 V. D.C. Superhet radio. It appeared in a 1936 issue of Radio-Craft magazine. OCR (optical character recognition) software is run on them to separate the textual content, which allows search engines to capture words that helps people find information. There are still many people who restore and service these vintage radios, and often it can be difficult or impossible to find schematics and/or tuning information. I keep a running list of all data sheets at the bottom of the page...

Carl and Jerry: Too Lucky

Carl and Jerry: Too Lucky, August 1961 Popular Electronics - RF Cafe WebsiteAs is the normal modus operandi (MO) of John T. Frye with his "Carl & Jerry" series of techno-dramas, this "Too Lucky" episode combines adventure with electronics to teach a lesson in the process of entertaining with a great story. If you're a fisherman, you'll particularly enjoy this one. I have to admit to not knowing about this method of "electrofishing" (although not called by that name here) for drawing fish to a high voltage alternating electrical field and then capturing them with a net once close enough to be paralyzed (stunned). A process called "galvanotaxis" which causes uncontrolled muscular convulsion in the fish causes them to swim towards the source...

Television Set Shipments by Areas

Television Set Shipments by Areas, May 1949 Radio & Television News - RF Cafe WebsiteAccording to a tally crafted by Radio & Television News magazine in 1949, the total number of television sets sold in the United States in 1947 and 1948 was 964,206. There were approximately 146 million people at the time per the U.S. Census. If there was an average of 4 people per household, that works out to around one television set for every 36 houses. Some households already had TV sets during that time, but far fewer than half owned a television. Nobody owned a color TV then because no commercial broadcaster used a color camera. Color was still a future feature being hyped in Mechanix Illustrated and Scientific American, like flying cars and personal computers. Today, of course, everybody that wants a television has a television... or two... or three. Effectively, every smartphone and computer is a TV (via Internet, not direct OTA transmissions) as well. In 1949, almost all TVs were owned by people who paid for them themselves. Today, many sets are bought by people who have been subsidized by fellow citizens forced to help pay for them via tax policies...

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