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Post by dorn on Jun 30, 2020 4:18:26 GMT -6
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Post by oldpop2000 on Jun 30, 2020 7:36:11 GMT -6
Interesting article, thanks.
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Post by oldpop2000 on Jul 10, 2020 15:08:24 GMT -6
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Post by oldpop2000 on Jul 27, 2020 7:19:32 GMT -6
I thought I would post this document which is a Naval War College official document to brief students on the fundamentals of warfare. It's most important point was the Estimate of the Situation. This is the 1942 version. The original was first published in 1936. Sound Military Decisions_compressed.pdf (8.22 MB)
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Post by oldpop2000 on Aug 7, 2020 7:46:07 GMT -6
In 2011, a world history databank was created titled Seshat after the Egyptian god of record-keeping. I haven't gone through it or used it, but here is the link: seshatdatabank.info/
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Post by vonfriedman on Aug 23, 2020 3:01:00 GMT -6
With regard to similar studies conducted in Italy, in 1995, Rivista Marittima published: E. Cernuschi, Marinelettro e il radiotelemetro italiano: lo sviluppo e l'evoluzione del radar navale (1933-1943) (127 pages). Marinelettro was one of the names of a development research center in Leghorn, where Prof. Tiberio, Dr. Carrara and others developed the Italian GUFO radar. See also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gufo_radar
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Post by oldpop2000 on Aug 23, 2020 7:45:10 GMT -6
With regard to similar studies conducted in Italy, in 1995, Rivista Marittima published: E. Cernuschi, Marinelettro e il radiotelemetro italiano: lo sviluppo e l'evoluzione del radar navale (1933-1943) (127 pages). Marinelettro was one of the names of a development research center in Leghorn, where Prof. Tiberio, Dr. Carrara and others developed the Italian GUFO radar. See also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gufo_radarThe Italians had established the Regio Instituto Elettrotecnico e della Communicazioni della Marina in 1916. Professor U Tiberio actually submitted a report in 1935 about a program for radio location. An experimental 1.5 m continuous-wave set, EC1, was tried in 1936 with improvements the following year. These tests showed that one must use pulsed waves for anything practical, which led to such a set, EC2, that proved to be unsatisfactory. Work was discontinued until the shock of conducting war without radar drove the belated lesson home L Brown. A Radar History of World War II: Technical and Military Imperatives (p. 95). Kindle Edition.
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Post by vonfriedman on Aug 24, 2020 2:18:38 GMT -6
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Post by oldpop2000 on Aug 24, 2020 8:13:51 GMT -6
Good post, radar technology is important to understand. However, it isn't fun to work on, trust me.
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Post by oldpop2000 on Sept 10, 2020 7:56:22 GMT -6
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