Dipole Keith wrote: » 105.8 is Newstalk from the midlands I’d say it’s meant to be 105.7 The Beach
castle2012 wrote: » 105.7 fm had interference on it last night. It was definitely 105.8fm
Infoanon wrote: » Both Pirate FM and Club FM are off the air.
Dipole Keith wrote: » I’m hearing the Freedab in Dublin got raided this morning, I’d say the FM pirate stations are off as a precaution
castle2012 wrote: » Club Fm's stream is off. I hope they where not also taken out.
Mr. MooYagi wrote: » So who's on tonight?
Franko87 wrote: » Today one of the FreedDAB sites have been hit .this was a heavy handed reckless raid with the removal of our 45 ft tower( legal criminal damage) . Rest assured our second site is standing by and all services will continue soon.
castle2012 wrote: » Sorry to hear. Clearly Free-dab is starting to have an impact or the would not have bothered. Hopefully your back up and running soon. Great service for Dublin area.
JDxtra wrote: » Fresh 99 was on as well.
Dipole Keith wrote: » It also means the freedab’s card is marked, So just like FM it’s illegal. Some stations came off FM thinking this platform was safer.
kazoo106 wrote: » @Mr.MooYagi - I posted a very similar post over in the DAB thread. Sometimes the amount of red tape and cronyism involved in Ireland Inc would open one's eyes. I can absolutely guarantee you that the reason for what happened yesterday was not soley a breach of the Wireless Telegraphy Act. Over the last year, through my own work, I have witnessed first hand, the stupidity, headstrongism, and downright arrogance of even the highest level of a certain government department. I have absolutely no doubt that similar issues are at play here. Alas, incumbants and big business rule the roost and devise policy Whomever in charge here should be actually helping radio and where possible promote the medium. Open up band III for Gods sake to a light licensing scheme and let the market decide what works and what doesnt. This is the antipole of what is going on in Ireland at the moment, radio listenership is shrinking rapidly and if you don't believe me, ask anyone under 30. I completely disagree with what JNLR say about this. I feel we may actually have reached the point of no return, helped only by a quango which thinks it is still 1995.
Mr. MooYagi wrote: » My reckoning is that certain established members of the old boys club are getting the ear of BAI and in turn Comreg. They loathe competition, they are afraid of losing market share, they utterly lack any level of creativity and reinvention and resort to stopping anything else in its tracks. Look at Dublin radio. Pretty poor by any standards. All doing the same thing, all sound the same, all punching well below their weight. BAI needs serious overhaul, the act likewise. Outdated, out of touch, far from serving the needs of choice. Lift the news resrtictions, lift irish language restrictions etc etc. Survival of the fittest. Then see just how good the existing operators are. I'll guarantee you, some would fold. But its ireland, land of the eejit, the gombean, the begrudger and things never change.....and on and on we go.
kazoo106 wrote: » This is the antipole of what is going on in Ireland at the moment, radio listenership is shrinking rapidly and if you don't believe me, ask anyone under 30. I completely disagree with what JNLR say about this. I feel we may actually have reached the point of no return, helped only by a quango which thinks it is still 1995.