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The name "RadioShack" is a nautical term that dates back to the invention of the radio at the turn of the 20th century. At the time, wireless radio equipment aboard ships was generally housed above the bridge in a wooden structure called the "radio shack." The founders of RadioShack thought the name
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Where did the phrase, radio shack, come from? Back in the early days of radio, the equipment was highly experimental and all home-built, requiring a nearby workshop. In addition, the first transmitters used a noisy spark to generate radio waves....many early stations were built in a garage or tool
70:, a small, wooden structure placed on deck to house the ship's radio equipment became known as the "radio shack". Today, a radio shack can be anywhere that radio equipment is housed and operated, usually a room such as with
74:, but for some the entire "shack" may consist of a hand-held radio or two while others may operate mobile equipment in a vehicle. In amateur radio use, the room housing the equipment is often called a "ham shack".
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shed. The term “shack” was only natural and carries through today as a description of the state of order and cleanliness found in many a ham’s lair
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appropriate for a new retail business that supplied electronic equipment to "ham" radio operators and ships' radio officers.
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to generate radio waves, and so were often housed in a separate outbuilding or shed. When radio was first adopted by the
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This article is about radio rooms. For RadioShack
Corporation, see
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102:Random House Unabridged Dictionary: radio shack
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30:A typical amateur radio shack
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161:"Ham Radio Glossary"
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