KLFX

KLFX (107.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting an Active Rock format. Licensed to Nolanville, Texas, United States, the station serves the Killeen-Temple area. The station is currently owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and features programming from Premiere Radio Networks.[1] The station's studios are located in Harker Heights, and its transmitter is located in Nolanville.

KLFX
CityNolanville, Texas
Broadcast areaKilleen-Temple-Fort Hood metropolitan area
Frequency107.3 MHz(HD Radio)
Branding107.3 The Fox
Slogan"107-3 The Fox Rocks!"
Programming
FormatActive Rock
AffiliationsPremiere Radio Networks
Ownership
OwneriHeartMedia, Inc.
(Clear Channel Broadcasting Licenses, Inc.)
History
First air dateMarch 27, 1995 (1995-03-27)
Former call signsKKFF (1993-1994; CP)
Call sign meaningFoX
Technical information
Facility ID60090
ClassA
ERP1,950 watts
HAAT160 meters
Transmitter coordinates31°5′39″N 97°34′52″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitehttp://www.1073rocks.com

History

The station went on the air as KLFX on March 27, 1995. The facility was issued an initial construction permit on February 22, 1993 and assigned the callsign KKFF on March 29, 1993. Prior to sign-on, the callsign was changed to the current KLFX on November 1, 1994.[2] The station airs much of the same playlist and specialty programming as sister station 102.5 KBRQ in Waco, typically in simulcast, but running its own imaging and commercial load specific to the Temple-Killeen-Fort Hood market.

gollark: https://esolangs.org/wiki/WHY
gollark: All three.
gollark: Unless you turn up the optimization setting to ~30, at which point it makes quite fast code.
gollark: ```python#!/usr/bin/env python3import argparseimport subprocessparser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Compile a WHY program')parser.add_argument("input", help="File containing WHY source code")parser.add_argument("-o", "--output", help="Filename of the output executable to make", default="./a.why")parser.add_argument("-O", "--optimize", help="Optimization level", type=int, default="0")args = parser.parse_args()def build_C(args): template = """#define QUITELONG long long intconst QUITELONG max = @max@;int main() { QUITELONG i = 0; while (i < max) { i++; } @code@} """ for k, v in args.items(): template = template.replace(f"@{k}@", str(v)) return templateinput = args.inputoutput = args.outputtemp = "ignore-this-please"with open(input, "r") as f: contents = f.read() looplen = max(1000, (2 ** -args.optimize) * 1000000000) code = build_C({ "code": contents, "max": looplen }) with open(temp, "w") as out: out.write(code)subprocess.run(["gcc", "-x", "c", "-o", output, temp])```The compiler for the new `WHY` language. Made as a joke because someone on the esolangs server insisted that all compiled languages were fast.
gollark: BT being bad, who would ever guess so?

References


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