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wrote in message oups.com... I also thought it was interesting that they seem to be keeping track of "page impressions" (which I take to be 'hits) on their website. You can have a whole lot of hits without anyone actually bothering to read anything! Consequently, getting lots of hits does *not* mean you're getting your message out. Hell, search engines do a lot of hitting these days; popularity shouldn't be based on the number of hits a web site gets. --Mike L. |
Yeah, and when they can get a shortwave radio for
1/5 the cost of the Worldspace receiver, guess what they'll get?? --Mike L. "David" wrote in message ... They share. On Sun, 20 Mar 2005 23:45:25 GMT, "David Eduardo" wrote: "David" wrote in message .. . On 19 Mar 2005 19:23:57 -0800, (Jim) wrote: The BBC West Asia service is available Free to anyone in Nepal with a $200 Worldspace receiver. Which is about twice the average monthly income of a Nepalese, I believe. |
On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 13:25:04 -0500, "Michael Lawson" wrote: Yeah, and when they can get a shortwave radio for 1/5 the cost of the Worldspace receiver, guess what they'll get?? --Mike L. Y'all really are dinosaurs. It's the 21st Century. Lo: http://www.firstvoiceint.org/How/Satellite.html |
David wrote: On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 13:25:04 -0500, "Michael Lawson" wrote: Yeah, and when they can get a shortwave radio for 1/5 the cost of the Worldspace receiver, guess what they'll get?? --Mike L. Y'all really are dinosaurs. It's the 21st Century. Lo: http://www.firstvoiceint.org/How/Satellite.html Nah, we're just still smart enough to operate a SW receiver, 'tard boy! dxAce Michigan USA |
David wrote: On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 13:25:04 -0500, "Michael Lawson" wrote: Yeah, and when they can get a shortwave radio for 1/5 the cost of the Worldspace receiver, guess what they'll get?? --Mike L. Y'all really are dinosaurs. It's the 21st Century. Lo: http://www.firstvoiceint.org/How/Satellite.html Move along, 'tard boy... there's no satellite radio to be heard here. dxAce Michigan USA |
David wrote:
On 19 Mar 2005 19:23:57 -0800, (Jim) wrote: ...... The BBC West Asia service is available Free to anyone in Nepal with a $200 Worldspace receiver. http://www.worldspace.com/programmin..._asiastar.html Except that in April Worldspace is going to encryption and will require a monthly license, more than the monthly income of most Nepalis etc. Radio for the elites indeed. -- -\_,-~-\___...__._._._._._._._._._._._. For real Dxing, see]http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~vz6g-iwt/index.html |
Dan Say wrote:
David wrote: On 19 Mar 2005 19:23:57 -0800, (Jim) wrote: ...... The BBC West Asia service is available Free to anyone in Nepal with a $200 Worldspace receiver. http://www.worldspace.com/programmin..._asiastar.html Except that in April Worldspace is going to encryption and will require a monthly license, more than the monthly income of most Nepalis etc. Radio for the elites indeed. Problem is, the elites are all the suits at the BBC care about. They've even said that they don't want to be heard by the average person. So they're going to satellite radio and FM relays in cities where the rich and powerful congregate (there's one in San Francisco but not in Sacramento; I doubt very much that Omaha will ever have any BBC programming). Apparently the BBC is just interested in narrowcasting-the selected targeting of the rich and powerful to the exclusion of everybody else. It's a sad end to what was once the great news reporting service in the world, the one that tried to tell the news honestly to as many people as it could reach. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
"David" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 13:25:04 -0500, "Michael Lawson" wrote: Yeah, and when they can get a shortwave radio for 1/5 the cost of the Worldspace receiver, guess what they'll get?? --Mike L. Y'all really are dinosaurs. It's the 21st Century. Lo: http://www.firstvoiceint.org/How/Satellite.html Still costs too much, because the "as little as $150" is not what they will pay; in the third world, it tends to cost higher. Many people there already own shortwaves and they don't have our need to have the latest gadget. If it's the 21st Century, how come we're still listening to AM radio and watching analog televisions?? --Mike L. |
"dxAce" wrote in message ... Jim wrote: On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 20:23:26 -0800, running dogg wrote: Problem is, the elites are all the suits at the BBC care about. They've even said that they don't want to be heard by the average person. They have? Link, please? Yes, they have. Don't have a link at hand, but they have indeed indicated in the past that they are more interested perhaps in reaching the elites who have a hand in shaping policy, etc. You'd have to go back and research the shortwave literature. There's a reference in the 2003 Passport, page 81. The current head of the BBC sniffs at the idea of wanting to be heard by Detroit automobile workers. --Mike L. |
"David" wrote in message ... On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 07:21:18 -0500, "Michael Lawson" wrote: Still costs too much, because the "as little as $150" is not what they will pay; in the third world, it tends to cost higher. Many people there already own shortwaves and they don't have our need to have the latest gadget. If it's the 21st Century, how come we're still listening to AM radio and watching analog televisions?? --Mike L. $68 wholesale. There is a foundation. AM radio and analog TV aren't relevant. Tell that one to the people who own the stations. Locally, the AM stations do quite well against the FM stations, and there's a big reason why some industry types are getting worried about the cutover to digital television; not enough people are buying digital tv's. --Mike L. |
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