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Actually, it's because your browser isn't properly fetching the "symbols" font. W, in that font, is in fact a capital omega.
I'm using Firefox 3.6.13. What do I need to do to get it?
Edit: It's showing up properly now.
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The "height" that the article is talking about is not referring to the height of the copper layer on the board, but rather the spacing between the signal trace and the nearest ground.
Same thing. It's how high the trace is off the ground plane which may be on the other side of the board (in the case of only 2-layer) or it may be on an inside layer. If it's inside, you have to be very specific in the instructions to the PCB manufacturer so the spacing ends up being correct.
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I would imagine that you don't have total, absolute freedom about trace widths and heights
You won't necessarily have tight control over the height, but you can adjust the width to get the desired impedance for whatever height you're stuck with. My particular CAD does not allow a continually-variable trace width. You have to pick a set of 16 widths for the particular board, which normally way more than enough; but when I did the board with the 2.4GHz chip antenna last year (which specifically called for 50Ω transmission line to feed it), I overlapped traces to get .001" resolution on the width.
The antenna towers at the 50,000W AM transmitter I was in on the job of installing in 1981 in Hawaii were about 56Ω with a reactive component of six or eight ohms. They were a little over .26λ tall IIRC (297' for 870kHz), with a ground plane of copper wires burried in the ground, radiating out.