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T8AA-FM (87.9 MHz), branded as Eco-Paradise FM (abbreviated as EPFM) is a radio station broadcasting from Koror, Palau. T8AA-FM is owned by the Government of Palau and co-owned with T8AA. T8AA-FM calls itself the "Voice of Palau". Eco-Paradise FM competes against the private media outlet Talungab Media Company (television) and Palau Wave Radio. [1]
In most of the 70s FM was seen as highbrow radio associated with educational programming and classical music, which changed during the 1980s and 1990s when Top 40 music stations and later even country music stations largely abandoned AM for FM. [39] Today AM is mainly the preserve of talk radio, news, sports, religious programming, ethnic ...
In the United States, FM broadcasting stations currently are assigned to 101 channels, designated 87.9 to 107.9 MHz, within a 20.2 MHz-wide frequency band, spanning 87.8–108.0 MHz. In the 1930s investigations were begun into establishing radio stations transmitting on "Very High Frequency" (VHF) assignments above 30 MHz.
Today FM is a commercial FM radio station, owned and operated by Bauer Audio Ireland Limited, which broadcasts throughout the Republic of Ireland. Broadcasting since 17 March 1997, it broadcasts mostly music, with a daily news and current affairs programme. Today FM holds a licence from the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland as far as the year ...
E FM (88.3 FM) is a Colombo, Sri Lanka–based radio station. Tagged with the catchphrase "Your Lifestyle Station", E FM is one of the three radio channels ( Shree FM and Ran FM) operated and managed by EAP Broadcasting Company Ltd., [ 1 ] a subsidiary of the EAP Edirisinghe Group of Companies.
The closure of FM radio in Denmark has been canceled, and there is no known date for future closure. On 1 October 2017 a nationwide switch from DAB to DAB+ took place and three DAB multiplexes became available: DAB MUX 1 Digital Radio Cibicom is the gatekeeper of this multiplex broadcasting commercial national radio. DAB MUX 2
A period of allowing existing FM stations to broadcast on both the original "low" and new "high" FM bands followed, which ended at midnight on January 8, 1949, at which time all low band transmissions had to end. [18] In 1978 one additional frequency reserved for educational stations, 87.9 MHz, was allocated. [19]
Throughout the late 1950s, students and faculty involved with WAMU-AM pushed to create an FM station that could reach beyond campus and serve Washington, D.C., as a whole. [13] In late 1960, the university received a non-commercial FM broadcasting license, and WAMU made its first FM broadcast on October 23, 1961, on 88.5 MHz using a 4,000-watt ...