September, Wednesday 23rd., 2020
Both in East and West: Spectrum bands above 95 GHz and a 
breakthrough in 6G, to happily annul and nullify the deathening 5G!!!!!!!
Great, benevolent, for the thousands of years struggling Humanity,  news are crowning these 2020 first Autumn  days...:
a. The QFS !!!
b. The 6G    !!!
c. The  new US Federal Judge !!!
 Possibly:Amy Coney Barrett.A brilliant judge and a mother of five...!
( Justice Ginsburg's legislation -God rest her soul- led to many millions of abortions, mainly in the Black Community, numbers far beyond exceeding,  reasonably explainable causes...)
Maria L. Pelekanaki 
<<...FCC Chairman Ajit Pai invited NYU Wireless Professor Ted Rappaport, 
who was instrumental in conducting ground-breaking millimeter wave 
research, to present his institution’s findings thus far on the 
opportunities afforded by the spectrum bands above 95 GHz, where 
“science fiction will become reality,” Rappaport told the commission.

 NYU Wireless Professor Ted Rappaport:
"The vision and hard work by Chairman Pai, the commissioners, the FCC
 staff, and past work by Chairman Wheeler, have kept the U.S. on the 
cutting edge of 5G, ensuring that our country will enjoy the vast 
applications and efficiency it will provide,” he said. “Now, with the 
Spectrum Horizons initiative and this historic vote, the FCC has 
launched the race to 6G, helping to ensure the U.S. will play a leading 
role in future generations of wireless."
"President Trump mentioned 6G a few weeks ago - perhaps the first 
world leader to do so. As an engineer and educator, I'm happy to know 
our country's leaders are working to support American competitiveness in
 Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM),” Rappaport said. 
“STEM and engineering research are so vital for our country's economic 
future, and it needs attention like the President gave to 6G." 

Russian presidential representative on digital and technological development Dmitry Peskov
-Dmitry Peskov, Press Secretary for the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin:
"I can't tell you where exactly, but one Russian lab has made a 
breakthrough in 6G just recently, creating a new type of chip that did 
not exist in the world before. What I’m saying is that the 6G is already
 in sight," Peskov said, adding that the lab in question was a civilian 
one....>>
MOSCOW,
 September 17. /TASS/. Russian specialists created a new type of chip 
that accelerates the development of the sixth generation communications 
networks, presidential representative on digital and technological 
development, Dmitry Peskov said at an online conference, organized by 
TASS Thursday.
"I can't tell you where exactly, but one Russian lab has made a 
breakthrough in 6G just recently, creating a new type of chip that did 
not exist in the world before. What I’m saying is that the 6G is already
 in sight," Peskov said, adding that the lab in question was a civilian 
one.
Introducing sixth generation communication networks requires solving 
such technological tasks as deployment of relatively more base stations 
closer to the subscriber, he added.
"In several years, we will receive mass Internet from space, it will 
become very close to us. It must be perceived as a basic 
infrastructure," the presidential representative said, outlining 
the technological prospects for the coming years.
On
 Thursday, the TASS news agency, the Agency for Strategic Initiatives 
(ASI) and the Roscongress Foundation presented an online forecast of the
 world countries' development outlook until 2035, which focused on 
political, technological and sociocultural aspects. The research was 
authored by a group of Russian experts.
 
FCC moves to open spectrum above 95 GHz for 
new technologies
 
The FCC’s Spectrum Horizons First Report and Order creates a new 
category of experimental licenses for use of frequencies between 95 GHz 
and 3 THz. (Pixabay)
 
 
The FCC unanimously voted to adopt
 new rules related to the spectrum above 95 GHz that encourage the 
development of new technologies—and may even lead to 6G.
Once thought to be more or less useless—similar to how much of the 
industry used to think of the millimeter wave spectrum that’s now being 
deployed for 5G—these super-high spectrum bands are now viewed as 
offering opportunities for innovation, especially for data-intensive, 
high bandwidth applications as well as imaging and sensing operations.
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai invited NYU Wireless Professor Ted Rappaport, 
who was instrumental in conducting ground-breaking millimeter wave 
research, to present his institution’s findings thus far on the 
opportunities afforded by the spectrum bands above 95 GHz, where 
“science fiction will become reality,” Rappaport told the commission.
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The applications that become possible at these 
higher frequencies are kind of mind-blowing, he said. With so much 
bandwidth and wider bandwidth channels, you can start having data rates 
that approach the bandwidth needed to provide wireless cognition, where 
the computations of the human brain at those data rates could actually 
be sent on the fly over wireless. As such, you could have drones or 
robotics receive in real time the kind of perception and cognition that 
the human brain could do.
The conventional wisdom is that as you go higher in frequency, you 
get more loss. “That’s only if you use an omnidirectional antenna, the 
old way of doing cellular 10 and 20 years ago. When you start using 
directional antennas, what happens is, you actually do better as you go 
higher in frequency for a given power level and a given antenna physical
 size,” Rappaport said. 
RELATED: FCC considers order to make spectrum above 95 GHz available for unlicensed use
To enable innovators and entrepreneurs to most readily access this 
spectrum, the FCC’s Spectrum Horizons First Report and Order creates a 
new category of experimental licenses for use of frequencies between 95 
GHz and 3 THz. These licenses will give innovators the flexibility to 
conduct experiments lasting up to 10 years, and to more easily market 
equipment during the experimental period, according to the FCC.
“Today, we take big steps towards making productive use of this 
spectrum,” Pai said in his statement. “We allocate a massive 21 
gigahertz for unlicensed use and we create a new category of 
experimental licenses. This will give innovators strong incentives to 
develop new technologies using these airwaves while also protecting 
existing uses.”
Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said it’s worth noting that the 
spectrum in these higher bands is different from the lower bands in that
 it’s subject to the authority of both the FCC and the National 
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), and that 
requires more meaningful coordination among the federal partners.
Fellow Democratic Commissioner Geoffrey Starks also noted that the 
terahertz spectrum imaging could change the way doctors and researchers 
understand biological processes on the cellular level and doctors may be
 able to use the technology to conduct noninvasive cancer screening 
tests. In security settings, terahertz spectroscopy can be used to 
identify dangerous materials and weapons, meaning threats to safety can 
be identified without body scams.
But he added that he has serious questions about the FCC Enforcement 
Bureau’s tools to detect interference in these and other high-frequency 
bands. It’s not currently capable of policing a significant amount of 
millimeter wave spectrum, which is being used for 5G, and he’s concerned
 that without sufficient resources for modern enforcement tools, efforts
 will be undermined.
While voting for the order, Commissioner Michael O’Rielly said the 
FCC’s action on this spectrum in no way reduces the need for making more
 unlicensed allocations of spectrum and he pointed to two items in 
particular—revisiting the 5.9 GHz band and taking steps to open the 6 
GHz band for unlicensed use—as ways the commission can address that.
RELATED: NYU series tackles next spectrum frontier: terahertz
In a statement provided to FierceWireless, Rappaport said he was 
honored to be invited by Chairman Pai to be part of the historic vote to
 open up spectrum above 95 GHz for the first time in the history of the 
United States.
"The vision and hard work by Chairman Pai, the commissioners, the FCC
 staff, and past work by Chairman Wheeler, have kept the U.S. on the 
cutting edge of 5G, ensuring that our country will enjoy the vast 
applications and efficiency it will provide,” he said. “Now, with the 
Spectrum Horizons initiative and this historic vote, the FCC has 
launched the race to 6G, helping to ensure the U.S. will play a leading 
role in future generations of wireless."
"President Trump mentioned 6G a few weeks ago - perhaps the first 
world leader to do so. As an engineer and educator, I'm happy to know 
our country's leaders are working to support American competitiveness in
 Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM),” Rappaport said. 
“STEM and engineering research are so vital for our country's economic 
future, and it needs attention like the President gave to 6G."