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![]() wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Very little of interst to rural residents in Latin America can be found on SW. First, such folk are generally only Spanish or indigenous language speakers (such as the Quechua and Aymar=E1 and Guaran=ED speakers of the = Andean zone and Paraguay. Second, rural residents are very poor, wtih annual incomes of less than $600 on the average, where a SW receiver is generally not an option. They might have one radio per village, or something. I remember seeing pictures of rural folks all gathered around the radio, listening. But that was years ago, though... I never saw that in Latin America. And I built my first station there 41 years ago. In the last 3 decades, AM FM receivers have been prevalent and cheap: nearly everyone has one. AM & FM networking on a national level brings good local signals to nearly all of Latin America, with no need for SW, which is now a curiosity. |
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