Fundación Cultural para la Sociedad Mexicana

Fundación Cultural para la Sociedad Mexicana, A.C. (Cultural Foundation for the Mexican Society) is a Mexican civil association whose primary activity is the operation of radio stations.

The radio stations owned by FCSM are noncommercial (social) stations with Radio Maria programming. This is noteworthy, as Mexican law restricts religious programming on radio and prohibits the ownership of broadcast outlets by religious associations.

Stations

FCSM owns 11 radio stations, 9 on FM and 2 on AM.[1][2] The stations at Ensenada, Zamora, Guasave, Ciudad Obregón and San Miguel de Allende were awarded in 2017 and 2018; León was approved in December 2019. Ensenada launched in February 2020.

Since 2003, FCSM has programmed XELT-AM in Guadalajara, with the station's commercial concession registered to Televisa Radio. XELT is the national originating station, with the headquarters and studios for Radio Maria Mexico located in Zapopan.

CallsignFrequencyCityERP/power
XHARB-FM101.9Ensenada, BC3 kW[3]
XHFSM-FM100.7Puerto Vallarta, Jal.3 kW[4]
XHJAC-FM105.7Zamora-Jacona, Mich.3 kW[5]
XHFCSM-FM94.1Cuernavaca, Mor..5 kW[6]
XHPBP-FM106.7Puebla, Pue.3 kW
XHCSM-FM107.9San Luis Potosí, SLP3 kW
XHFCS-FM90.3Culiacán, Sin.15 kW[7]
XHAVE-FM90.5Guasave, Sin.
XHCOB-FM95.3Ciudad Obregón, Son.
XHPEBH-FM91.5León, Gto.
XEFCSM-AM680[8]Mérida, Yuc.2.5 kW (day)
1 kW (night)
XESMA-AM1280San Miguel de Allende, Gto.
XELT-AM920Guadalajara, Jal.10 kW (day)
1 kW (night)
gollark: I expect quantum stuff would probably just be special-purpose hardware running specific tasks while coordinated by classical computers.
gollark: There is Shor's algorithm, which lets you factor primes much faster or something.
gollark: Come to think of it, we could probably put a lot of computing hardware into the solar power stuff, which presumably has a lot of power and some cooling.
gollark: The main constraints for high-performance computer stuff *now* are heat and power, or I guess sometimes networking between nodes.
gollark: Also, for random real-world background, there are only two companies making (high-performance, actually widely used) CPUs: Intel and AMD, and two making GPUs: AMD and Nvidia. Other stuff (flash storage, mainboards, RAM, whatever else) is made by many more manufacturers. Alienware and whatnot basically just buy parts from them, possibly design their own cases (and mainboards for laptops, to some extent), and add margin.

References

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