splinter65 wrote: » I know exactly where you are. Irish country and western ****e too. Hours and hours and hours of that ****e punctuated by that insanely grinning voice. Nightmare.
ford fiesta wrote: » Country on RTE Gold. So what??? there's no harm in the state broadcaster having a random station that plays a mix of any genre ....that is what is missing in stations these days. I guess 2FM used to be like that for its first 15 years, trad, country, irish country (as recent as 1999), irish, metal, pop, dance...no format no pre-selected playlist.
ford fiesta wrote: » Country on RTE Gold. So what???
There's no harm in the state broadcaster having a random station that plays a mix of any genre ....that is what is missing in stations these days. I guess 2FM used to be like that for its first 15 years, trad, country, irish country (as recent as 1999), irish, metal, pop, dance...no format no pre-selected playlist.
Phat Dick wrote: » Heard a bit of O Shea today, doesn't sound like he has many listeners and he has a producer. Christ on a bike
Andy From Sligo wrote: » sorry to sound like a stuck record but they might get more listeners if they go nationwide on DAB ...
Phat Dick wrote: » Rolling out dab across the country right now would literally bankrupt rte
Ursus Horribilis wrote: » Norway, which has a population of 5.2 million, has nationwide DAB coverage.
Former Former wrote: » And a lot more money than us. RTE can't do it. It would be politicial suicide for the government to fund it because of the way politics works here. So it's nothing to do with population, it's just the way it is.
Ursus Horribilis wrote: » So some parts of the country are getting RTE radio stations the rest of us don't, even though we're all paying the same taxes and TV licence fee?
More Music wrote: » I known broadband isn’t great in some parts of Ireland. I’m confident though that anybody who’s heard of RTÉ Gold and wants to listen could manage a 96kbps stream.
Andy From Sligo wrote: » could it eat into your data plan streaming it by broadband or on your phone?
More Music wrote: » Watch one less HD cat video on YouTube. You’ll get a lot of RTE Gold for that. Seriously. People watch Netflix, YouTube, Amazon Prime, stream IPTV, download content to their Sky box, use BBC and RTE Players, message videos and photos, watch videos on social media platforms. Don’t forget Tunein, Spotify, Apple Music et al. We consume so much content now, the list is endless. A 96kbps audio stream is pretty insignificant in real terms. It’s only an issue for the folks who want to give out about RTE.
Andy From Sligo wrote: » from an advertising perspective , advertiser want as much of an audience as possible listening to radio ads - so if RTE rolled out nationwide DAB radio signal it could mean more listeners to the advertisers ads. I know RTE Gold dont run adverts (at the moment) but with the other RTE radio stations that do rely on advertising as the licence fee income I would say thats a pretty good selling point to Irish advertisers - FM is old hat now, old technology , bad reception a lot of the time , out of date - Digital clear stereo is where it is at now which for the masses DAB radio's can be really picked up cheap across Ireland in the shops now, however the whole of Ireland cannot receive DAB signal (so thank goodness a lot of the time they include FM on radios and hifi equipment) but you watch not too long off now I reckon manufacturers will drop FM off their audio products soon (as analog TV has been dropped) presuming that everyone can receive a DAB signal nationwide in their country - then we will all be stuffed . Sure you can tune in by wi-fi radio's (they are still expensive to buy, not as cheap as DAB Radios) you can listen on on your laptop I suppose, but then you got to have a laptop to hand, you can listen on your phone , but has everyone got enough data in their package to listen to it constantly.
Ursus Horribilis wrote: » Believe it or not, there are parts of the country where people would dearly love to be able to watch cat videos on YouTube. I was in a relative's house last night and the only Internet signal they have is a snail slow Vodafone one.
Former Former wrote: » No doubt, but if the government started rolling out DAB, the first thing you'd hear would be "why are they wasting time and money on DAB when they can't even get rural broadband rolled out?" Then you'd have; "We can't house the homeless and they're wasting money on DAB" "They're killing old people by shutting down LW 252. How is my 90-year old mother going to work a DAB radio?" "That's not much use to the diaspora, is it?" "I live between two mountains and reception is patchy. I bet it's crystal clear in Dublin though". "This will be the death of local radio, not that anyone in Dublin 4 cares about that" Further The list is endless. No one really wants DAB and spending more public money on it is opening a wasp's nest and sticking your honey-covered face right in.
Ursus Horribilis wrote: » Try being on Vodafone in an area where you can't get more than Edge on other networks.