ophelia said:I don't mind paying the TV licence, but I think it should be one licence per household.
If I have two television sets in my home do I need licences for them both?
If the equipment capable of receiving a television signal (i.e., a television set, a personal computer), etc. is held in a household (i.e., apartment, flat, house), then one television licence will cover multiple pieces of equipment. In other words, if you have a television set in your living room and kitchen, one television licence covers both sets.
However, if the building in which the equipment is kept (i.e., the house, etc.) is sub-divided into flats, apartments, separate living quarters, then a separate television licence must be held for each of these quarters. In other words, an individual licence must be held for each separate flat, apartment, etc.
Uri Geller. No wonder we did not score. He must be one of the greatest scammers of the 20th & 21st centuries.ophelia said:I don't mind paying the TV licence, but I think it should be one licence per household. I do have issues with subsidising the huge salaries of TV presenters and I would also like to know if RTE paid for the helicopter which circled Landsdowne Rd with Uri Geller and Blanaid Ni Chofaigh last week in an effort to create good vibes!
If the equipment capable of receiving a television signal (i.e., a television set, a personal computer), etc.
Because Uri Geller was talking to Blanaid Ni Chofaigh on The Afternoon Show and he suggested that he would be willing to fly over Landsdowne Rd if he was supplied with a helicopter. Who else would have been daft enough to have paid for it?ClubMan said:I didn't think that RTÉ were funding Uri's helicopter ride. Why do you suspect that they were?
ophelia said:Who else would have been daft enough to have paid for it?
daltonr said:I assume that by Personal Computer they mean a Personal Computer WITH A TV
CARD. ........
I hope not if so I was breaking the law for two years. Of course if a regular PC did require a licence that would be a law I'd seriously consider breaking.
Anything that is capable of receiving a tv signal must have a tv licence. Including a PC with a TV card.
daltonr said:My question was whether PC's WITHOUT a TV Card would require a licence,
since they are generally capable of being used for watching DVD's.
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