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・ Two-toed sloth
・ Two-Toed Tom
・ Two-tone
・ Two-up
・ Two-up two-down
・ Two-variable logic
・ Two-vector
・ Two-way
・ Two-way alternating
・ Two-way analysis of variance
・ Two-way communication
・ Two-way contract
・ Two-way deterministic finite automaton
・ Two-way forward
・ Two-way indicator species analysis
Two-way radio
・ Two-way satellite time and frequency transfer
・ Two-way security
・ Two-way simultaneous
・ Two-way street
・ Two-Way Stretch
・ Two-way television
・ Two-wheel drive
・ Two-wheel tractor
・ Two-wheeler
・ Two-wheeler usage in Japan
・ Two-wire circuit
・ Two-Year-Old Trophy
・ Two/Three
・ TwoAYGGAY RNA motif


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Two-way radio : ウィキペディア英語版
Two-way radio

A two-way radio is a radio that can both transmit and receive (a transceiver), unlike a broadcast receiver which only receives content. A two-way radio (transceiver) allows the operator to have a conversation with other similar radios operating on the same radio frequency (channel). Two-way radios are available in mobile, stationary base and hand-held portable configurations. Hand-held radios are often called walkie-talkies, handie-talkies, or just hand-helds.
Two-way radio systems usually operate in a half-duplex mode; that is, the operator can talk, or he can listen, but not at the same time. A push-to-talk or Press To Transmit button activates the transmitter; when it is released the receiver is active. A mobile phone or cellular telephone is an example of a two-way radio that both transmits and receives at the same time (called full-duplex mode). It uses two different radio frequencies (channels) to carry the two directions of the conversation simultaneously.
==History==
Installation of receivers and transmitters at the same fixed location allowed exchange of messages wirelessly. As early as 1907, two-way telegraphy traffic across the Atlantic Ocean was commercially available. By 1912 commercial and military ships carried both transmitters and receivers, allowing two-way communication in close to real-time with a ship that was out of sight of land.
The first truly mobile two-way radio was developed in Australia in 1923 by Senior Constable Frederick William Downie of the Victorian Police. The Victoria Police were the first in the world to use wireless communication in cars, putting an end to the inefficient status reports via public telephone boxes which had been used until that time. The first sets took up the entire back seat of the Lancia patrol cars.〔Haldane, Robert. (1995) ''The People's Force, A history of the Victoria Police''. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84674-2, 1995〕
As radio equipment became more powerful, compact, and easier to use, smaller vehicles had two-way radio communication equipment installed. Installation of radio equipment in aircraft allowed scouts to report back observations in real-time, not requiring the pilot to drop messages to troops on the ground below or to land and make a personal report.
In 1933, the Bayonne, New Jersey police department successfully operated a two-way system between a central fixed station and radio transceivers installed in police cars; this allowed rapidly directing police response in emergencies.〔(IEEE History Milestones retrieved Oct. 2, 2007 )〕 During World War II walkie-talkie hand-held radio transceivers were extensively used by air and ground troops, both by the Allies and the Axis.
Early two-way schemes allowed only one station to transmit at a time while others listened, since all signals were on the same radio frequency – this was called "simplex" mode. Code and voice operations required a simple communication protocol to allow all stations to cooperate in using the single radio channel, so that one station's transmissions were not obscured by another's. By using receivers and transmitters tuned to different frequencies, and solving the problems introduced by operation of a receiver immediately next to a transmitter, simultaneous transmission and reception was possible at each end of a radio link, in so-called "full duplex" mode.
The first radio systems could not transmit voice. This required training of operators in use of Morse code. On a ship, the radio operating officers (sometimes shortened to "radio officers") typically had no other duties than handling radio messages. When voice transmission became possible, dedicated operators were no longer required and two-way use became more common. Today's two-way mobile radio equipment is nearly as simple to use as a household telephone, from the point of view of operating personnel, thereby making two-way communications a useful tool in a wide range of personal, commercial and military roles.

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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