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#21
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#22
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Personally, I'd pay $13 a month just to get the BBC
World Service anytime, anyplace in North America. My guess is it would cost less than $13 to repair your antenna. Then you could tell Sirius to shove it. |
#23
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Do you really listen to music on your "smart phone"? And, if you do,
how does that materially differ from having a Sirius radio subscription? It gives me access to everything on the internet, not just the commercial crapola that's available through Sirius. Steve |
#24
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Do you really listen to music on your "smart phone"? And, if you do,
how does that materially differ from having a Sirius radio subscription? It gives me access to everything on the internet, not just the commercial crapola that's available through Sirius. But -- and I'm being serious now, I'm not arguing -- can you listen to music over your phone in anything resembling hi-fi sound? Is it a realistic medium for music? Unless something has changed drastically lately, then it's not. You're critical of people that pay for the Sirius service, because you consider it "commercial crapola," but your solution requires the payment of a monthly fee, too, but it doesn't allow you to enjoy music through it. What am I missing here? |
#25
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What am I missing here?
You can listen to the sound via a speaker and I think it sounds just fine. As for the monthly fee...well, (1) my employer pays for it and (2) even if my employer didn't pay for it, it'd be a fee giving me access not just to a body of music or whatever, but to the internet---which, for good independent reasons, I need access to anyway. |
#26
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#27
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#28
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What kinds of things have you tried to improve your reception?
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#29
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On Tue, 10 May 2005 08:18:31 -0400, dxAce
wrote: Doesn't look like shortwave to me, 'tard boy. One interesting quote on his website which sorta ties into parts of the SW hobby/hobbies: "It's like the old pirate radio stations that sat offshore and played what they wanted." Of course, with XM or Sirius there's still a gatekeeper although the gate is less restrictive than those that the FCC or the broadcasting conglomerates are putting up. (I believe XM is partially owned by Clear Channel.) Netcasting, on the other hand, has almost no gate. |
#30
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Hmmm. It must be hard to go beyond that finite amount then. It's never
happened to me, despite heavy use. Steve |
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