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Digital Radio
There was a two page piece on Digital Radio in the Melbourne AGE Green
Guide last week promising all sorts of wonders. I did notice a distinct lack of comment about anything that looked like quality content. I seem to recall that Digital radio has been less than a runaway success in UK. Anyone got any comments or info from UK. ... F X Holden |
Digital Radio
Francis Xavier Holden wrote:
There was a two page piece on Digital Radio in the Melbourne AGE Green Guide last week promising all sorts of wonders. I did notice a distinct lack of comment about anything that looked like quality content. I seem to recall that Digital radio has been less than a runaway success in UK. Anyone got any comments or info from UK. .. F X Holden Don't know about successful or not but there are too many stations for the available bandwidth so the data rate is the lowest in Europe and hence the quality is, in general, crap. Ian |
Digital Radio
I agree with Ian the quality is poor on many pop stations, but is ok on the
classic music stations. The best I have seen is BBC Radio 3 192Kbs then Classic FM at 160Kbs and the worst was a pop commercial station at 64 Kbs, this is using a DAB tuner. This should not be a problem in the long term if the price of DAB equipment is kept high, as we all know the vast majority of people will not pay large amounts of money for music equipment, why pay £100 for a radio when you can get one for £10, and with only a small user base the commercial stations will not see a benefit in paying for a DAB licence as well as FM / AM so in time will leave if we are lucky. whiteflyer "Ian Bell" wrote in message ... Francis Xavier Holden wrote: There was a two page piece on Digital Radio in the Melbourne AGE Green Guide last week promising all sorts of wonders. I did notice a distinct lack of comment about anything that looked like quality content. I seem to recall that Digital radio has been less than a runaway success in UK. Anyone got any comments or info from UK. .. F X Holden Don't know about successful or not but there are too many stations for the available bandwidth so the data rate is the lowest in Europe and hence the quality is, in general, crap. Ian |
Digital Radio
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 08:58:16 +0100, "Whiteflyer"
wrote: I agree with Ian the quality is poor on many pop stations, but is ok on the classic music stations. The best I have seen is BBC Radio 3 192Kbs then Classic FM at 160Kbs and the worst was a pop commercial station at 64 Kbs, this is using a DAB tuner. This should not be a problem in the long term if the price of DAB equipment is kept high, as we all know the vast majority of people will not pay large amounts of money for music equipment, why pay £100 for a radio when you can get one for £10, and with only a small user base the commercial stations will not see a benefit in paying for a DAB licence as well as FM / AM so in time will leave if we are lucky. whiteflyer If you want to know just how bad DAB can be, listen to Sunrise radio. I guarantee you won't do it for long. It is on a multiplex run by Capital radio, and I'm pretty sure they've *never* listened to it. d -- http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Digital Radio
In article , Francis Xavier
Holden writes There was a two page piece on Digital Radio in the Melbourne AGE Green Guide last week promising all sorts of wonders. I did notice a distinct lack of comment about anything that looked like quality content. I seem to recall that Digital radio has been less than a runaway success in UK. Anyone got any comments or info from UK. .. F X Holden Well terrestrial DAB is a very poor relation of what It could've been. The bit rates have been dropped to allow for more user "choice" and audio quality has been very severely compromised. In no way could anything under 192 K/bits be described as good quality, that's any better than existing FM services. Sorry but digital is not a word I associate with quality anymore especially in the broadcast field. Very often radio stations compound the poor bitrates by a horror called transcoding where a CD will be ripped onto a hard disk (computer) playout system, at a lower bit rate, this will then be crammed down a low bitrate line and then "processed" to make the whole thing much worse. You might like to take a look at http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/ This site is written by Steve Green who has an almost evangelical conviction about DAB quality and has proved to be a right pain in the arse for DAB broadcasters. There is a reference to an article in the UK Sunday Times which is very critical of DAB "sound" with some research works conducted by Dr David Robinson and Academic from the university of Essex IIRC. Shame really, this could have been a world class service and it was conceived as such but now it makes broadcasters like even the BBC seems not to give a damn about what they transmit with the exception of the classic channel Radio 3 but there will come a time when that will be reduced to 128 K, just give it time. Its not been anything like a commercial success either, with DAB radio sales remaining very low.... -- Tony Sayer |
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