Yes, the Sirius Sportster 5 can pick up XM signals
In order to pick up Sirius radio stations you will need to have a Sirius radio satellite receiver. If your current car radio does not have a auxiliary jack to plug the receiver into you may also need to get a new head unit for you cars audio system.
One of the services offered by Seek A Song is allowing a user to pick out a song on the Sirius radio. The Sirius radio station is a satellite station that can be accessed in cars.
The compound verb in the sentence is "pick up," which consists of the two verbs "pick" and "up" merged together to form a single action.
Because XM radios and Sirius radios operate on differenty frequencies it will be necessary to purchase an updated receiver in order to get all of the channels each entity has offered. However, with the merger of the two companies, a subscriber will be able to pick and choose programming from both line ups.
When a Supervisor merges questions, it generally goes this way: The less-grammatically correct question is merged into the more grammatically correct question. Or, the question that hasn't been on site very long, is merged into the question that has been here much longer. The second question (the one that is being merged) becomes an alternative wording to the first question (primary question - the one that it is merged into). Popularity, answers, alternative wordings, links, related questions, discussion pages, etc are merged together under the primary question. The truth is simply that the supervisor chooses which question to merge. They can then look to pick a different alternate as prime if they desire or even re word the prime question.
If you are in the northern hemisphere, Winter is a good time to see Orion. Using Orions belt as pointer stars, continue down to the horizon and you'll see a very bright star - Sirius. It's the brightest star in out skies due to its actual brightness and its close proximity to our solar system (8 light years or so). It is actually a binary star system though, there are two stars in orbit about each other. The main star, Sirius A is a white hot main sequence star (active), while its companion, Sirius B, is a white dwarf star. Sirius B was thought to once be the most massive of the two, but became an inactive white dwarf some 120 million years ago. Online pictures will show the two stars side by side, the Sirius B white dwarf seen as a much smaller and dimmer star than its active companion, Sirius A. You wont be able to pick out the two stars with the naked eye.
James did not hate severus snape. James only want to pick on Snape. Snape liked lily Evans also known as Lily potter Well yes mostly because of Lily. Becaus James loved Lily but so did Snape. SO that just makes them hate each other. I hope your welcome. I loved your answer ^^ Plus1: Snape kept spying on them, because he wanted to know Lupin's secret. Plus2: According to Sirius, Snape adored Dark Magic, James hated it. Well what he did (tormented Snape with Sectumsepra and Levicorpus), could be very easily describe as Dark. And he was a rotten bully as a boy, cursed random children just for fun (also according to Sirius))
# Sun # Sirius # Canopus # Arcturus # Alpha Centauri A # Vega # Rigel # Procyon # Achernar # Betelgeuse # Hadar # Capella A # Altair # Aldebaran # Capella B # Spica # Antares # Pollux # Fomalhaut # Deneb # Mimosa (Excluding the sun)
Sirius and XM satellite radio executives say consumers will benefit from their merger, approved Friday by the Federal Communications Commission. But for specifics, nobody's crystal ball is very clear. They can't make sweeping changes right away: The radios used by Sirius' 8.4 million customers and XM's 9.7 million use incompatible technology. DONE DEAL: FCC OKs satellite radio merger Still, the FCC insisted on concessions for its OK on their merger. What consumers can expect: Q: Do Sirius or XM users need new radios? FIND MORE STORIES IN: Oklahoma | Federal Communications Commission | iPods | Oprah Winfrey | Howard SternA: No. Each service still will offer its current programs. They say a radio that works with both XM and Sirius will be available within a year. Q: What about prices? A: The companies told the FCC they won't raise rates, including the $12.95-a-month basic subscription, for three years. (They reserved the right after the first year to pass along increases in fees they're charged for the music they broadcast.) Also, Sirius and XM each now will offer a pared-down $9.99-a-month package of primarily music channels and another of news, sports, and talk. Q: Will channels from both now be available? A: Within three months, the companies will offer a $16.99-a-month bundle called "Best of Both." Buyers would get their basic service, plus some channels from the other service. They haven't said how many of those channels, or whether marquee offerings such as Sirius' Howard Stern and NFL or XM's Oprah Winfrey or baseball will be included. Q: What about offering channels a la carte? A: They will offer two a la carte options: For $6.99 a month, customers can pick 50 channels from Sirius or XM, but not both, from 100 that each will make available. Additional channels then can be added for 25 cents each. Or, for $14.99, customers can pick 100 channels a la carte from Sirius' and XM's "Best of Both" offerings. The catch: You'll need a new radio. The companies say radios with a la carte software will be on sale within three months. They gave no cost. Q: Are new non-commercial channels due? A: Sirius and XM say they'll set aside 4% of their capacity, about six channels each, for educational and informational shows. Q: Will we see any changes in satellite radios? A: Within a year, Sirius and XM will license their technology and sell a chip set to electronics
Satellite radio has become a huge thing over the past couple years. For a small monthly fee, users can experience commercial-free radio, with stations covering everything from popular music to comedy. There are two main providers of Satellite radio that users can choose from, XM or Sirius. Even though the two radio giants merged recently, you’ll still have a decision to make when it comes to picking your satellite radio poison. While both carry different stations, you can find just about anything you want with either choice. With most people, though, the decision comes down to one thing: sports. Now, if you’re not a sports radio listener, this probably isn’t going to matter to you at all, and honestly, you’ll be fine selecting either XM or Sirius, because the same array of music, talk and comedy span both stations. If you are a sports listener, however, this is where your decision gets tricky, because even though there are sports stations offered on both XM and Sirius, each provider carries one major sport. XM radio carries every Major League Baseball game, while Sirius is the provider of every NFL football game. Now, you’ll still be able to hear some of every sport on both stations, but XM and Sirius have dedicated stations devoted to these sports. It’s one of the best features satellite radio provides, the ability to listen to any baseball or football game. You can also select from stations featuring coverage of NASCAR, the NBA, the NHL, soccer, the PGA Tour and multiple sports-talk stations. Since the two companies merged , prices are going to be comparable for service. So, really, your decision is your sport’s desire. If you’re a football fan, you’re going to want to go with Sirius. If you’re a fan of baseball, stick with XM. Just like television, there are several packages that you can choose from, most of which include the actual satellite radio. The service itself runs between $10 and $20 per month, depending on the package, and you can expect to pay between $100 and $200 for the actual radio. Satellite radio provides a lot to people, from popular music, to politics and talk radio and even stations dedicated completely to comedy. One of the most popular features, though, is the ability to listen to almost any baseball or football game, but that leads to a decision. You’ll have to pick your favorite sport and stick with it, and you can’t go wrong.
The future tense of pick is "will pick" or "shall pick." For example, "I will pick up groceries tomorrow."
A supervisor looks at the 'edit alternates' option on the blue bar while viewing the question. There should show blank boxes on each alternate. Check as many as you want and select 'split'. Be sure to batch split alternates that need to be split, and select the 'split & merge' option for alternates that need to be split from the original question but need to be merged together. (note: all alternates checked while 'split & merging' will be merged together into a question, you can't pick and choose, so be sure that all the alternates selected go together)