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MVS Radio are a group of four international Spanish radio networks owned by the mass media conglomerate MVS Comunicaciones. The group of radio networks consists of Exa FM, La Mejor, FM Globo and MVS Noticias and are broadcast in a various Latin American countries including Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Panama and the United States.
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Exa FM is an international network radio format of MVS Radio in Spanish-language Top 40 outlets broadcasting throughout Mexico, Honduras, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Ecuador, Guatemala, and portions of the southwestern United States including California, Arizona, and Texas.
Stations covering Exa FM include:
La Mejor is a network radio format of MVS Radio in Regional Mexican outlets broadcasting throughout the Mexico and portions of Costa Rica and El Salvador.
Stations covering La Mejor include:
Radio station based on 1980s, 1990s music up to the present.
Stations include:
Radio station broadcasting romantic ballads in Spanish.
Stations include:
A station broadcasting English language music from the 1950s to the 2000s. Stereorey (Argentina) follows however the format of songs from the 1960s to the present, with American Hot Adult Contemorary music.
Stations broadcasting Stereorey include:
Exa is a decimal unit prefix in the metric system denoting 1018 or 1000000000000000000. It was added as an SI prefix to the International System of Units (SI) in 1975, and has the unit symbol E.
Exa comes from the Ancient Greek ἕξ, used as a prefix ἑξά-, meaning six (like hexa-), because it is equal to 10006.
Examples:
Exa or EXA may refer to:
In computing, EXA is a graphics acceleration architecture of the X.Org Server (see also X Window System) designed to replace XAA (the XFree86 Acceleration Architecture) and to make the XRender extension more usable, with only minor changes needed to adapt XFree86 video drivers written to use XAA; it was designed by Zack Rusin and announced at LinuxTag 2005 and first released with X.Org Server version 6.9/7.0.
Historically, a distinction has been made between 2D and 3D acceleration. 2D acceleration was provided by the venerable XFree86 Acceleration Architecture, which made the video card's 2D hardware acceleration available to the X server.
The 3D acceleration set was provided via the Direct Rendering Manager, which worked by mapping 3D rendered pictures on top of the 2D picture. This had some buggy corner cases, but more or less worked, until compositing entered into the desktop. This distinction has become the source of a lot of bugs, and performance problems.
EXA was introduced as a stopgap measure, to provide better integration with XRender than XAA did, improving the X.Org Server 2D performance. In practice, while this proved quite advantageous in some respects, it also exhibited a number of corner cases and regressions.