Worth every penny... 67p/month per household for the website and only a couple of quid a month for radio #bargain

I never knew how the licence fee was split up... but, thanks to some aimless time-waste surfing before lunch, I do now.
Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

The licence fee


The annual cost of a colour TV licence is £145.50 (as from 1 April 2010). A black and white TV licence is £49.

How the licence fee was spent in 2009/2010



Between 1 April 2009 and 31 March 2010 the cost was £142.50 – the equivalent of £11.88 per month or just under 40p per day.

The BBC used its income from the licence fee to pay for its TV, radio and online services, plus other costs, as shown below.

TV

£7.85 per month per household

Television costs

Radio

£2.01 per month per household

Radio costs

Online

£0.67 per month per household

Online costs

Other costs

£1.35 per month per household


Other costs

About the licence fee

Everyone in the UK who watches or records TV as it is broadcast needs to be covered by a TV licence. This includes TV on computers, mobile phones, DVD/video recorders and other devices.

The Government sets the level of the licence fee. The most recent funding settlement was in January 2007, when the licence fee was agreed for a six-year period, as shown below. The fee has to be approved each year by Parliament. The licence fee for 2012 will be fixed as part of the next funding settlement and the expected maximum is given below.
Date from Colour licence Black and white licence
1 April 2007 £135.50 £45.50
1 April 2008 £139.50 £47
1 April 2009 £142.50 £48
1 April 2010 £145.50 £49
1 April 2011 £148.50 £50
1 April 2012 £151.50 maximum £51 maximum
Read more at www.bbc.co.uk

Smartphones increasing podcasting opportunities?

It seems more and more people are getting smartphones, and more and more of those people are downloading podcasts to those phones allowing them to listen to those podcasts wherever and whenever they choose.

http://LittleSmasher.com encode their podcasts to optimise smartphone 'downloadability'.
allmediascotland.com - The Journalism and PR exhange
Radio listening via a 'smartphone' is becoming ever more popular, according to figures released today by the organisation that monitors radio listening behaviour in the UK.
Says RAJAR, some 20 per cent of smartphone owners - or 1.4 million people - have downloaded an application that enable them to listen to a radio service via their smartphone. The survey also reveals relatively high levels of people aged 15 and over listening to radio via the internet and also downloading a podcast: 31 per cent and 15 per cent, respectively.
Among the main findings of the survey:
* 71 per cent of those 'listen again' listeners (and they listen again to an average two programmes per week) say the service has no impact on the amount of live radio they listen to.
* 15 per cent of the adult 15+ population have downloaded a podcast. Almost half (47 per cent) of podcast users claim to listen to podcasts at least once a week but only 25 per cent of users find the time to listen to all the podcasts they download.
* The typical podcast user subscribes to just under five podcasts, and spends about an hour per week listening to them. As in previous surveys, comedy and music remain the two favourite genres.
* 77 per cent of podcast users listen to podcasts at home, and 45 per cent listen in the car or on public transport.
* Podcasting appears to have a positive effect on radio listening, with 36 per cent of respondents saying that they now listen to radio programmes to which they did not listen previously, up from 32 per in November last year.
* 20 per cent of smartphone owners have downloaded a radio app and, of those, over half (53 per cent) use their radio apps at least once a week.

Survey Reveals Increased 'Smartphone' Radio Listening

July 14 2010 11:57 Read more at www.allmediascotland.com