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・ Military Governors in Nigeria during the Olusegun Obasanjo regime
・ Military Governors in Nigeria during the Yakubu Gowon regime
・ Military Comfort Women (1974 film)
・ Military Commendation Medal
・ Military commissariat
・ Military commission
・ Military Commission Order No. 1
・ Military Commissions Act
・ Military Commissions Act of 2006
・ Military Commissions Act of 2009
・ Military Committee for National Liberation (Mali)
・ Military Committee for National Recovery
・ Military Committee for National Salvation
・ Military Committee of the Congolese Party of Labour
・ Military communication in feudal Japan
Military communications
・ Military Communications and Electronics Museum
・ Military computers
・ Military conquests of the Ming dynasty
・ Military conquests of Umar's era
・ Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2015
・ Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2014
・ Military Cooperation with Civilian Law Enforcement Agencies Act
・ Military Council
・ Military Council for Angolan Resistance
・ Military Council for Justice and Democracy
・ Military Council of National Salvation
・ Military Counseling Network
・ Military Counterintelligence Directorate
・ Military counterintelligence of the Soviet Army


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Military communications : ウィキペディア英語版
Military communications

Military communications or military signals involve all aspects of communications, or conveyance of information, by armed forces. Military communications span from pre-history to the present. The earliest military communications were delivered by humans on foot. Later, communications progressed to visual and audible signals, and then advanced into the electronic age. Examples from ''Jane's Military Communications'' include text, audio, facsimile, tactical ground-based communications, terrestrial microwave, tropospheric scatter, naval, satellite communications systems and equipment, surveillance and signal analysis, encryption and security and direction-finding and jamming.〔IHS Jane's (Military Communications ) Retrieved 2012-01-23〕
==History==
The first military communications involved the use of runners or the sending and receiving of simple signals (sometimes encoded to be unrecognizable). The first distinctive uses of military communications were called "signals". Modern units specializing in these tactics are usually designated as "signal corps". The Roman system of military communication (''cursus publicus'' or ''cursus vehicularis'') is an early example of this. Later, the terms "signals" and "signaler" became words referring to a highly-distinct military occupation dealing with general communications methods (similar to those in civil use) rather than with weapons.
Present-day military forces of an informational society conduct intense and complicated communicating activities on a daily basis, using modern telecommunications and computing methods. Only a small portion of these activities are directly related to combat actions.
Modern concepts of network-centric warfare (NCW) rely on network-oriented methods of communications and control to make existing forces more effective.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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