Radio Waves: The silence of RCI, Cox Radio Hit by Ransomware, Asheville Radio Museum Reopens, and New Aluminium-Ion Battery Chemistry

Photo from the RCI Sackville transmitter site in 2012, a few months prior to its closure.

Radio Waves:  Stories Making Waves in the World of Radio

Because I keep my ear to the waves, as well as receive many tips from others who do the same, I find myself privy to radio-related stories that might interest SWLing Post readers.  To that end: Welcome to the SWLing Post’s Radio Waves, a collection of links to interesting stories making waves in the world of radio. Enjoy!

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributors Troy Riedel, NT, Tracy Wood and the Southgate ARC for the following tips:


The silence of Radio Canada International (Open Canada)

The former head of CBC News laments the evisceration of CBC’s international service and Canada’s shrinking voice in the world

For a country that once regarded itself as one of the world’s leading middle powers, Canada’s voice on the international scene is a strikingly quiet one these days. It reminds me of the line from that famous “dead parrot” sketch in Monty Python: “bereft of life, it rests in peace.”

The latest sign of this is the decision by CBC/Radio-Canada to implement changes that have effectively smothered Radio Canada International (RCI), its fabled global audio and online service that has helped serve as “Canada’s Voice to the World” for more than a half century.

In a December announcement replete with CBC doublespeak, the CBC unveiled a “major transformation” of RCI that, it claimed, would ensure RCI remains “a strong and relevant voice” in this century’s media landscape. Not surprisingly, the practical impact of these changes is precisely the opposite.

Flipping RCI’s historic mission on its head, the service will now focus more on ethnic minorities within Canada rather than on continuing to produce programs tailored uniquely for international audiences. More than half of RCI’s beleaguered staff have been laid off.

This latest CBC battering of RCI — a pattern that has gone on for decades — triggered considerable criticism. In February, a group of 32 prominent Canadians sent an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other senior government ministers urging that the CBC scrap its planned strategy and appoint an independent committee to plan a rebuild of the international service: “In an interconnected world in search of truth, facts and honest journalism, countries like Canada cannot abdicate their role on the world stage.” Its signatories included former prime minister Joe Clark, former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy, former UN ambassador Stephen Lewis, actor Donald Sutherland and author Naomi Klein. Continue reading…

Live streams go down across Cox radio & TV stations in apparent ransomware attack (The Record)

Live streams for radio and TV stations owned by the Cox Media Group, one of the largest media conglomerates in the US, have gone down earlier today in what multiple sources have described as a ransomware attack.

The incident took place earlier this morning and impacted the internal networks and live streaming capabilities for Cox media properties, such as web streams and mobile apps. Official websites, telephone lines, and normal programming remained running but some live programming could not go on air as scheduled.

“This morning we were told to shut down everything and log out our emails to ensure nothing spread. According to my friends at affiliate stations, we shut things down in time to be safe and should be back up and running soon,” a Cox employee shared in a private conversation earlier today. Continue reading…

Asheville Radio Museum reopens to public after months-long pandemic closure (WLOS)

The Asheville Radio Museum reopened to the public Saturday, June 5, following a months-long closure due to the pandemic.

The museum, located on the campus of A-B Tech, and closed in November to follow the campus’s COVID-19 protocol to protect students and staff.

Asheville Radio Museum boasts a premier collection of vintage radios with the goal to educate, demonstrate and fascinate visitors about the importance of the radio, which was named the second most important invention of the twentieth century on the Science Channel.

Saturday’s reopening was highlighted by the addition of newly-procured radios as well as refreshed displays throughout the museum. Continue reading…

Aluminium-Ion battery development (Southgate ARC)

The Graphene Manufacturing Group in Brisbane, Australia together with the University of Queensland have according to the GMG website developed a Graphene Aluminium-Ion Battery energy storage technology that has up to three times the capacity of a lithium-ion battery and can charge up to sixty times faster.

The battery was created by inserting aluminium atoms into perforations made in graphene planes.
The company claims that because the batteries lack an upper Ampere limit that would otherwise cause spontaneous overheating, the batteries are also safer. The stable base materials also facilitate their recycling later.

The company hopes to bring these cells to market by the end of 2021 or early 2022

https://graphenemg.com/


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5 thoughts on “Radio Waves: The silence of RCI, Cox Radio Hit by Ransomware, Asheville Radio Museum Reopens, and New Aluminium-Ion Battery Chemistry

  1. Mario

    Nothing beats listening to distant international broadcast stations via shortwave that fade in/out, that are receivable one day and not the next due to band conditions. Mother Nature’s capricious effect on the ionosphere has always been part of the mix that makes SWL’ing appealing to some of us.

    Web streaming, while perhaps more elegant and less expensive business-wise, may get the message through clearly and consistently but as a fuddy-duddy SWL for over a half-century I find it totally unattractive.

    Reply
    1. Robert Gulley

      Well said, Mario – I couldn’t agree more. While I make use of the Internet as needed and obviously enjoy the information available (when properly filtered, of course!) radio’s magic is in the chance encounters, the serendipity of it all, and the “skills?!” used to maximize one’s reception.
      Sure, the clarity of streaming makes for perfect “reception,” but digging out that hard to get signal is just as rewarding to me today as it was 50+ years ago. Everything has its place and fans, and that’s great. For me, real radio reception is “where its at!” Cheers!

      Reply
  2. Tim Marecki

    Canada seems to make a lot of bad decisions where broadcasting is concerned. I used to be able to enjoy listening to CBC Sonica on Sirius XM. This was about 5 years ago. Now, it is no longer available—except to Canadian residents. What a shame, since they offered great folk and easy pop heard nowhere else! I truly miss RCI’s Maple Leaf Mailbag that used to go out on shortwave on Sunday!

    Reply
  3. Steve Allen

    Apparently the CBC is more concerned about multiculturalism than it it about serving the Canadian citizens who live in remote areas of Canada (and that’s a lot of remote). Radio is so important to the broadcast of news and public information, yet country after country continue to shut down their over the air national broadcasting services and switch to internet broadcasting. The problem must be that you cannot track who is listening to radio broadcasts, but the internet lets those in control track your listening choices. And what happens when the inevitable shutdown of the internet takes place, which I predict will be in 2021? Freedom in Canada has been going down hill since Trudeau Jr. took over. Twenty first century Canada appears to be a shell of the nation it once was.

    Reply
    1. Lou

      Relax.

      If the remote communities of Canada are anything like some of the isolated villages I’ve been to in Alaska, no one is losing sleep over not having reliable CBC broadcasts any more.

      A few of them have low powered FM stations to provide information and localized programming.

      The CBC is just going through the same issues that the BBC and other national broadcasters are going through.

      Why do they even exist in 2021? Technology has moved beyond a need for them and the days of empire building has come to a close….short of China (which shows in their HF schedules).

      Reply

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