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Messages - corq

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496
North American Shortwave Pirate / 6825u Ann Hoffer
« on: August 09, 2009, 2310 UTC »
this is possibly actually in AM, but with local noise my set picked up the content better in USB...

2308 - Female with guitar accompaniment SIO 222 from New Smyrna Beach Florida

497
North American Shortwave Pirate / 6925u wolverine radio
« on: August 09, 2009, 0300 UTC »
0245 on with ELO "Evil Woman"
?
0056 ID
0056 Beatles Paperback writer
0059 Fading a bit, slower melody,

498
She haunts the skies tonight, her anniversary...6925u rebroadcast from last year I believe. Spooky and intriguing.




499
Supporters of low-power FM (LPFM) radio won a victory on Friday when a federal appeals court rejected a lawsuit to stop the Federal Communications Commissions from protecting LPFM stations from full power station signal interference.

"This is terrific news for the low power radio community," declared Sakura Saunders of the Prometheus Radio Project, which helps LPFMs. "Now, these stations can focus on serving their local communities, rather than live in fear of displacement due to the whims of their full-powered neighbors."
On the other hand, the advocacy group that defended the LPFM service was circumspect about the win. "The decision in the courts merely protects the status quo," noted the Media Access Project in a statement sent to Ars. "Congress still must pass legislation to allow more low-power FM station to operate nationwide."

There's also the question of how to ensure the funding these stations need to more effectively serve their signal areas. More about that later, though. First let's look at the nuts and bolts of this case.
Free and local?

Although when battling artist performance fees the National Association of Broadcasters touts the "free and local" nature of over-the-air radio, the trade association is an ardent enemy of the most local and accessible part of the FM dial, the FCC's LPFM service. These approximately 800 educational stations, operating at 10 or 100 watts, commit to eight hours of local programming a day in exchange for their licenses. That's probably much more than your typical big-signal commercial license provides, even though many of them operate at one hundred times the power of LPFMs.

There could be a lot more of these stations on the FM dial, but when the FCC first authorized the service in 2000, the NAB and National Public Radio claimed that they would interfere with full-power signals, and got Congress to force a "third adjacent rule" on the service. No LPFMs could be licensed within three channels to the left or right of a big signal station, for the most part limiting the concept to less urbanized areas.

But this victory wasn't enough for commercial broadcasters and NPR. While invoking the threat of interference from LPFMs, they also insisted that the FCC not protect these smaller stations from signal "encroachment" by new full power licenses that established themselves nearby. In December of 2007 the Commission did so anyway, setting up new rules that limited "the responsibility of LPFM stations to resolve interference caused to subsequently authorized full-service stations," specifically when that alleged interference took place on a second adjacent channel.

Second adjacent Special Temporary Authorizations would be available (essentially waivers; see paragraph 67) to LPFMs, the FCC decided, when the encroaching station could not demonstrate that an STA was not in the public interest. The NAB quickly sued the FCC over this move in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

The NAB charged that the agency's Order violated the "Radio Broadcasting Preservation Act," by which Congress forced the FCC to stick that third-adjacent rule in its LPFM service. "It would make no sense to conclude that Congress meant to prohibit the [Commission] only from eliminating third-adjacent protections," the group's attorneys argued," while leaving the Commission free to reduce interference protections from channels closer on the dial that would cause even greater interference."

But the court noted that Congress authorized the FCC to commission a study determining whether the third adjacent rule was really necessary (the agency did, and the study concluded that it wasn't). The "plain text" of the statute, the judges noted, indicates that lawmakers "did not intend to restrain the Commission’s authority to respond to new circumstances potentially threatening LPFM stations" besides the third-adjacent concern.

The broadcasters also insisted the FCC had not provided a reasoned explanation for its new policies regarding LPFM, thus violating the Administrative Procedures Act. The DC Circuit's judges politely brushed this claim aside. "The Commission explained that its staff had identified approximately 40 LPFM stations that could be forced to cease operations under Section 73.809 because of increases in fullpower FM station modification applications," they noted. "The Commission’s discussion of the changed circumstances and minimal predicted interference satisfy the APA's requirement that an agency justify a reversal in course."
What's next?

All this is music to the ears of Congressmember Mike Doyle (D-PA), who, along with Lee Terry (R-NE), has a bill pending that would dump that third-adjacent rule once and for all. There's a parallel proposal in the Senate backed by Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and John McCain (R-AZ). No big surprise what Doyle thinks should happen now: "Congress should enact the Doyle-Terry-McCain-Cantwell legislation," he told Ars, "to dramatically expand the number of low-power FM stations the FCC is allowed to license."

The problem is that these bills have yet to get out of committee, although Doyle aides say there's a hearing in the House on LPFM scheduled for Thursday. Why so little movement on this issue? Aside from NAB opposition, perhaps because the LPFM question doesn't have the backing of any faction in big media. When Google wanted the FCC to authorize unlicensed broadband devices for the TV channels (aka "white space"), it launched a campaign based on alliances with prominent grassroots media groups like Joshua Breitbart of New York City's People's Production House, Tessie Guillermo of Zero Divide, and Matthew Rantanen, Director of Technology for the Tribal Digital Village. Their testimonies spoke to the democratic potential of white space devices.

But Google et al rarely reciprocate by endorsing other potentially democratizing media/telecom causes, especially ones that won't enhance their bottom line. And so the LPFM crusade pretty much gets its energy from groups like Prometheus and the Future of Music Coalition. While they're terrific advocates, media regulation movements rarely get to the finish line based solely on non-profit power.

There's also a perception that over-the-air radio is yesterday's technology. That's just not true. While conventional radio is in trouble, especially with the young, millions of people still tune in. Ars bets a whole lot of them will rediscover radio after Friday, June 12, when their analog-only television sets stop picking up full power signals.

Can LPFM, freed of third-adjacent shackles, help save "free and local" radio? To some degree, but there's another problem: funding. Classified as educational stations, LPFMs pretty much run on charity, non-profit support, and the very occasional Corporation for Public Broadcasting grant—exactly one applied for CPB money in 2006.

Most everybody loves the concept of the struggling, volunteer-driven, community radio station, but these low power signals almost never command audiences remotely comparable to commercial licenses. Obviously, wattage plays the leading role here, but so does money.

Given the furious resistance that commercial broadcasters put up against any regulations requiring them to expand their local reach, it makes sense to explore not only ways to boost the number of LPFMs, but also ways that they could get cash. One possibility would be to make it easier for LPFMs to get CPB grants. A very different approach would be to redefine them as something akin to Class A television stations: smaller-signal commercial entities that have to fulfill baseline local programming requirements.

But whatever happens, Friday's court decision is clearly part of a momentum building towards an expanded LPFM service. Ars asked the NAB for a comment on the ruling. We received no reply.

500
North American Shortwave Pirate / 0155 "Radio Josephine"
« on: April 25, 2009, 0204 UTC »
0155 - ID with Cindi Lauper "Girls Just wanna have fun"
0200 - Madonna "Material Girl"
SIO 434, some mingling with End of DCR's broadcast, but coming thru clear now

Reports to RadioJosephine@gmail.com

501
North American Shortwave Pirate / Re: Radio XXP
« on: April 11, 2009, 0320 UTC »
Return of Radio XXP # 03:15 (thx TheWeb!)
Foreigner - Hot Blooded
Kansas - Dust in the Wind

Sent my report in and got this nice eQSL:

[img="http://web1.twitpic.com/img/5291186-d7452a3527762dbc4610f56465fc5d25.49e08a1d-scaled.jpg"][/img]

502
North American Shortwave Pirate / UNID 6925u
« on: March 29, 2009, 2312 UTC »
Alerted via TheWeb on irc, SIO 444, from NSB, FL some metal music on atm.

Using 20ft randomwire "squirreltenna" in a sandpine ;-)

Awaiting ID catch.

2315: mention of "Tijuana Donkey Show"

Manic/Headbanger music

503
HF Beacons / Re: NEW BEACON ON AIR FROM WV
« on: March 19, 2009, 1333 UTC »
Thanks for posting this; I listen for beacons now and again, I will give this one a try!

504
North American Shortwave Pirate / 6925u WTCR w/ID 0038
« on: March 15, 2009, 0041 UTC »
WTCR Theme x 5? Voice ID @ 0040
0041 - Kinks

505
North American Shortwave Pirate / Radio Free Euphoria 6925
« on: December 30, 2008, 2051 UTC »
Picked up initially in usb with fade-ups ? Door-ish sounding music.

"F00king Schlobs" noted in the jingle; switched to AM

2045 Heard "Radio Free Euphoria",

SIO 212 from New Smyrna FL with deep fades, on my random wire Squirrel-Tenna(tm)

506
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban President Raul Castro called on Saturday for austerity measures including fewer subsidies for workers and stricter management to pull the country out of an economic morass aggravated this year by three hurricanes and the global financial crisis.

He told a year-end meeting of the National Assembly the government would cut official trips abroad by 50 percent and eliminate programs that reward good workers with free vacation trips but cost the government $60 million a year.

"The accounts don't square up," he said. "You have to act with realism and adjust the dreams to the true possibilities," said Castro, who officially replaced his ailing older brother Fidel Castro as president in February.

"Two plus two always equals four, never five," he said.

Castro implemented reforms when he took office, including opening the sale of computers and cell phones to Cubans and allowing them to go to hotels and stores previously reserved for foreigners.

But he said the country's economic problems would postpone some changes, including a planned government restructuring.

Castro lamented the economic effects of hurricanes Gustav, Ike and Paloma, which caused $10 billion in damages, and warned that no one can tell how bad world economic problems will get.

Cuba's import costs have soared while prices for key exports such as nickel have plunged, requiring the communist-run country to impose greater fiscal discipline, said the 77-year-old Castro.

Other government officials told the assembly Cuba's budget deficit had climbed to 6.7 percent of the gross domestic product as the economy grew at a slower-than-expected rate of 4.3 percent in 2008. They forecast 6 percent growth for 2009.

Before his speech, the assembly voted to raise the age at which workers can retire with a government pension by five years, to 65 for men and 60 for women. Officials said the change was needed because Cuba's population was aging rapidly due to a declining birth rate and immigration.

Castro said Cuban managers need to demand more from their workers, who receive free education and health care and subsidized food rations but on average earn only $20 a month.

"I have arrived at the conclusion that one of our big problems is a lack of systemic demand," said Castro.

He expressed dissatisfaction with the system of subsidies for those who can work, but do not, saying government handouts discourage Cubans from being more productive.

As Cuba prepares to mark the 50th anniversary of the revolution that put Fidel Castro in power on Thursday, Raul Castro paid tribute to him as the person "who has led us yesterday, today and always to victory and victory."

Fidel Castro, 82, has not been seen in public since undergoing intestinal surgery in July 2006.

507
Shortwave Broadcast / Re: Is DRM the next AM Stereo?
« on: December 29, 2008, 1755 UTC »
I agree - I listen to music online from Europe and independent stations now, more than I do traditional radio. Even Satellite radio choices are a wee too confining for me. Local stations just do the "heavy rotation" of the same 5-10 songs a wee bit too much. If traditional radio returned to it's more eclectic roots, I'd listen again. I just don't foresee that happening.

508
on for a few minutes already, ID @ 1431
Weak but audible with some drift. Christmas music and Santa "Ho Ho Ho" ing

Possibly my mis-id of sycko radio, as signal stablized

509
North American Shortwave Pirate / WTCR 6925u 01:00utc
« on: December 25, 2008, 0102 UTC »
0101 "Merry Christmas from WTCR" - oldies Christmas swing

SIO 434 from Central Florida via my random wire, hung by the tree with care ;-)

510
North American Shortwave Pirate / 5110 am "Radio Ramona"
« on: December 24, 2008, 0007 UTC »
5110 am (relay) with Euro music mixes, id "Radio Ramona" @ approx 0000utc.


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