XHZAA-FM

XHZAA-FM is a community radio station on 96.3 FM in Villa de Zaachila, Oaxaca. XHZAA is owned by Cultura y Comunicación de Zaachila, A.C. and is known as Zaachila Radio.

XHZAA-FM
CityVilla de Zaachila, Oaxaca
Frequency96.3 MHz
BrandingZaachila Radio 96.3
Ownership
OwnerCultura y Comunicación de Zaachila, A.C.
History
First air date
2010 (with permit)
Call sign meaningZAAchila
Technical information
ERP.02 kW[1]
Links
Websitezaachilaradio.org

History

Zaachila Radio has its roots in the 2006 Oaxaca protests, as one of eight pirate radio stations that began to operate around that time. It was supported by Section 22 of the SNTE teachers' union[2] and originally operated on 94.1 MHz.

On February 19, 2010, Zaachila Radio received a formal permit, this time on 96.3 with the callsign XHZAA-FM. It was among a wave of six community radio stations awarded permits by Cofetel.

gollark: > For many years, WinPcap has been recognized as the industry-standard tool for link-layer network access in Windows environments, allowing applications to capture and transmit network packets bypassing the protocol stack, and including kernel-level packet filtering, a network statistics engine and support for remote packet capture.
gollark: https://www.winpcap.org/
gollark: Oh, and to respond very late to this:> uh... why would you buy those things = it's a pretty generic componentI don't mean why those specific things, I mean why suddenly buy a bunch of solar hardware?
gollark: ***a*** is pretty unambiguously a bold/italicized a, but if you start shoving asterisks mid-word some stuff gets confused.
gollark: I think it's not even unambiguous, given weirdness with having a bunch of `*`s together.

References

  1. Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio FM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2015-08-03. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  2. Sosa, Yadira (February 23, 2010). "Conceden permiso a Zaachila Radio" [Concede permit to Zaachila Radio]. El Imparcial (in Spanish). Oaxaca, Oaxaca. Retrieved March 17, 2010.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.