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Old July 12th 09, 06:07 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
Booble[_2_] Booble[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2009
Posts: 20
Default BREAKING NEWS! iBiquity decalred bankruptcy in 2008! LMFAO!!!

On Jul 12, 12:57*am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Booble" wrote in message

...

The first section are the network locations, where Hispanic
Broadcasting is #18.

Which is amusing, as there is no such thing as Hispanic Broadcasting. It
ceased to exist on September 29, 2003. That is nearly 6 years ago.

Notice hit #29 from the DOJ.

Don't you consider that people search for things and get mismatches, or
check a result and find it has no bearing? 90% of the searches I do don't
find the exact data I want. Yet I hit a lot of sites in the process, but do
not peruse those sites.

The second section
are the keyword searches for you and Hispanic Broadcasting #3 and #4.

Funny, because I don't access the Internet ever from a "work" company-owend
machine... all of my connections, whether one of my 4 DSLs or 2 wireless
cards, are personal accounts.

I suspect you did not run any report or analysis, as you are finding a
company that has not existed for nearly 6 years.

This was run on Friday. LOL!

I think the word is "runs" which is what you will get if you start to
believe your own fabrications.

You're a kick to spar with.


"The Wonderful World of HD Radio"

"Perhaps it is because it is the American Public that has been paying
a large portion of the development costs for HD radio? Yup, that is
you and I. An FCC filing from North Carolina’s Public Radio Stations
cites: Just a few weeks ago, the House Appropriations Committee
approved an additional $40 million to assist public radio stations’
transition to HD radio technology.”

http://tinyurl.com/57ksx6

"DEAD AIR: Radio's great leap forward stalling in the Valley"

"KMBH, the National Public Radio affiliate based in Harlingen,
switched to HD this year, but the change did not boost its
inconsistent analog signal in the upper Valley. Monsignor Pedro
Briseño, the manager of the station and its television affiliate, did
not return multiple calls and an e-mail requesting comment on the
station’s shift. A fundraising campaign on the station asked local
listeners to contribute to the upgrade earlier this year, touting the
change as a service to listeners that would improve their experience.
The station’s business manager said she could not reveal the cost of
the upgrade, saying all media requests have to be routed to Briseño. A
public information request faxed to the station Monday evening has not
yet received a response. Organizations that receive government funding
are subject to state and federal open records laws, but have seven
business days to respond to information requests."

http://tinyurl.com/6gwdj4

The NPR is the biggest fraudster of all of you.