![]() |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I argued that DAB costs aren't intrinsically higher than any other transmission medium. But since this is too difficult for you to understand I'll not bother again. And Tony Sayer told you that DAB was intrinsically more expensive. No actual figures. Easy enough to find out what stations have to pay - a very different matter What would you know about this anyway? Your early comments on this subject seemed to suggest that you thought that it was mainly down to electricity bills, which shows how utterly clueless you are about the whole subject of transmission costs. As I said you never read anything carefully. But perhaps as an expert on such matters you'd give a breakdown of the transmission costs of AM, FM and DAB? No? Thought as much. -- *Young at heart -- slightly older in other places Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article 4993162c.335825750@localhost,
Don Pearce (Don Pearce) wrote: OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 Typical of both mediums, I'd say. Both smashing into limiters. And some two octaves missing at the top end off MW. Our DAB 'expert' does himself no favours by talking rubbish in among the snippets of truth. -- *What was the best thing before sliced bread? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 17:37:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB"
wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW. Try listening to Kerrang. Just had a brief listen for the first time ever. Sounds exactly the same as any other pop station. The fact that you'd say that speaks volumes about this entire issue. And far better quality than off MW. Listening to it now. It has improved since I last heard it, and I'd put it at just above MW now - a triumph for 21st century digital radio. Previously it was worse than MW. Seriously. And I bet the one you can hear is **** as well, but you won't admit that, because it doesn't suit your argument. A serious question - does your hearing cut off at under 5 kHz? Fool. Steve, for goodness sake stop back-pedalling, admit you were wrong and disappear. You storm in here like some juvenile bully, spewing your venom at everybody and expect to be taken seriously? I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. d |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Don Pearce wrote in message news:4993162c.335825750@localhost
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 Both are ****, but for different reasons. To be honest, I could listen to the MW for longer than I could the DAB version before resorting to pulling my wisdom teeth out to distract my mind from the pain. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I argued that DAB costs aren't intrinsically higher than any other transmission medium. But since this is too difficult for you to understand I'll not bother again. And Tony Sayer told you that DAB was intrinsically more expensive. No actual figures. Easy enough to find out what stations have to pay - a very different matter What would you know about this anyway? Your early comments on this subject seemed to suggest that you thought that it was mainly down to electricity bills, which shows how utterly clueless you are about the whole subject of transmission costs. As I said you never read anything carefully. But perhaps as an expert on such matters you'd give a breakdown of the transmission costs of AM, FM and DAB? Already done that on uk.tech.digital-tv. If you didn't pay attention I suggest you toddle over to have a look. No? Thought as much. See above. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have work to do. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Don Pearce wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
In article 4993162c.335825750@localhost, Don Pearce (Don Pearce) wrote: OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 Typical of both mediums, I'd say. That doesn't say much for DAB, does it? Both smashing into limiters. And some two octaves missing at the top end off MW. Our DAB 'expert' does himself no favours by talking rubbish in among the snippets of truth. I don't need to justify myself to a know-nothing like you, Plowman. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message
... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... I can't say I've listened to every single listen again programme available, You couldn't, unless you are capable of listening to many programmes at the same time 24 hours a day. Gosh, how do you come out with such clever comebacks? Well don't say daft things about not having heard every single listen again programme then! but yes, the quality of the listen again programmes I've listened to recently have been significantly better quality than on DAB. Well don't listen to DAB then. That's missing the point though, because the rest of the general public are being forcefully pushed towards DAB Are they?, can't say I've noticed. even though for millions of people the Internet or even digital TV woudl be a better platform for what they want. Which is probably why the BBC offers those as well. Also, because the BBC is so biased towards DAB and DAB offers crap quality it's trying to keep the quality down on other platforms. Basically, everything revolves around DAB. If they provided the best quality they could on other platforms and acknowledged taht there are problems with DAB's audio quality then I wouldn't mind. Gosh, this is turning into a real conspiracy theory! Analogue radio will be with us for the forseeable future, and most radio stations are now available as an internet stream. So why get so excercised over DAB? See above. So, what are you listening to? Yesterday's "Any Questions". Curiously I often notice the distortion is most noticable on the voices of the continuity announcers. Yes, I have actually heard R4's listen again streams are screwed up at the moment. Have you?, or did you just make that bit up? That's a temporary problem though, not an inherent problem. Nonesense! the quality today is just the same as it's been for months (which is rather better than it was before). R4's listen again streams use 128 kbps MP3, whereas R4 on DAB uses 128 kbps MP2. And MP3 is a far better codec to use at 128 kbps than MP2 is, that's for sure. To be fair, speech on DAB isn't the main problem. The main problem is music. BTW, the BBC's live and listen again streams should be moving over to using AAC/AAC+ over the next week or two (if you're not aware, AAC/AAC+ is an excellent codec). And the bit rates should increase over time, because Internet bandwidth costs are plummetting. I'm glad to hear it. Stick to DAB if you like, but you'd be sticking with the lowest quality digital platform. You mistake. I am not "sticking with DAB", I rarely listen to it. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message
... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... But the BBC is extremely biased against Internet radio, so the BBC is going to push everyone forcefully towards DAB whether that's the best system for them or not. That's the point. Is it? well well, so all those BBC internet streams are a figment of my imagination are they? Where did I say that? Hint: I didn't. I said "push everyone forcefully towards DAB". That's correct. That may be your opinion, but it's far from being a fact, as the existence of internet streams clearly demonstrates. I see no "push" towards DAB, and you have failed to demonstrate that there is one. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:53:27 GMT, Rob
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob The DAB actually has more bass than the MW, although they both bottom out at 42Hz (low E on the bass guitar). The MW has more level in the mid-lows 100 to 500Hz, which gives a perception of warmth. That is what you are hearing. The MW is exactly what my mother would have described as mellow years ago. My DAB radio lives by the bed, where it wakes me up and lets me hear the occasional BBC7 programme late at night. The mw radio lives in the kitchen - where it belongs (only I never use mw, just fm). All serious listening is courtesy of Freeview. d |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Don Pearce wrote in message news:49941ae5.337034484@localhost
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 17:37:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW. Try listening to Kerrang. Just had a brief listen for the first time ever. Sounds exactly the same as any other pop station. The fact that you'd say that speaks volumes about this entire issue. And far better quality than off MW. Listening to it now. It has improved since I last heard it, and I'd put it at just above MW now - a triumph for 21st century digital radio. Previously it was worse than MW. Seriously. And I bet the one you can hear is **** as well, but you won't admit that, because it doesn't suit your argument. A serious question - does your hearing cut off at under 5 kHz? Fool. Steve, for goodness sake stop back-pedalling, admit you were wrong and disappear. Don't try to tell me what to do. And the MW recording you provided is IMO easier to listen to than the DAB recording, IMO. You storm in here like some juvenile bully, spewing your venom at everybody and expect to be taken seriously? I'm not exactly insecure about my knowledge, so I have no need for it to be validated by people on here, thanks. I came on here, noticed a thread, read the thread, noticed a whole lot of nonsense being spewed, and I've replied to some of that nonsense so that these people can see the error of their ways. That's it, really, and I'll be off when I choose. In fact, I think I'll stay a bit longer than I was going to now you've tried to tell me what to do I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. I don't even know who that is. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"David Looser" wrote in message
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... I can't say I've listened to every single listen again programme available, You couldn't, unless you are capable of listening to many programmes at the same time 24 hours a day. Gosh, how do you come out with such clever comebacks? Well don't say daft things about not having heard every single listen again programme then! If you re-read what I said, I think you'll find it was a perfectly reasonable thing to say. but yes, the quality of the listen again programmes I've listened to recently have been significantly better quality than on DAB. Well don't listen to DAB then. That's missing the point though, because the rest of the general public are being forcefully pushed towards DAB Are they?, can't say I've noticed. Get a TV set then. They happen to advertise DAB on TV a fair bit. even though for millions of people the Internet or even digital TV woudl be a better platform for what they want. Which is probably why the BBC offers those as well. ? Also, because the BBC is so biased towards DAB and DAB offers crap quality it's trying to keep the quality down on other platforms. Basically, everything revolves around DAB. If they provided the best quality they could on other platforms and acknowledged taht there are problems with DAB's audio quality then I wouldn't mind. Gosh, this is turning into a real conspiracy theory! There's a hell of a lot of evidence that indicates that the BBC is highly biased towards DAB and against the Internet streams (far and away, they're mostly biased against the live streams rather than teh on-demadn streams on the iPlayer, because they see that as being complementary to some degree, whereas live is a competitor to DAB). 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB and zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio for starters. Analogue radio will be with us for the forseeable future, and most radio stations are now available as an internet stream. So why get so excercised over DAB? See above. So, what are you listening to? Yesterday's "Any Questions". Curiously I often notice the distortion is most noticable on the voices of the continuity announcers. Yes, I have actually heard R4's listen again streams are screwed up at the moment. Have you?, or did you just make that bit up? Firstly, I had already heard the problems with the speech on R4 listen again, and secondly someone else posted about this on alt.radio.digital as well: "They don't sound nearly as good as 128kbps mp3 should. I don't know if this is universal, or just on some programmes - the problem has been on all the Radio 4 programmes I've tried over the last few months. e.g. listen to the announcer during the first 40 seconds of this... http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00h62xq/Afternoon_Play_The_Foresters_Daughter/" So, no, I didn't make it up. That's a temporary problem though, not an inherent problem. Nonesense! the quality today is just the same as it's been for months (which is rather better than it was before). Absolute rubbish. This is a new problem. The on-demand streams only started using the long-awaited new encoders a couple of months ago, which you won't even be aware of, so to suggest that the quality has been the same as it is now for thet last few months is completely wrong. Did you just make that up? R4's listen again streams use 128 kbps MP3, whereas R4 on DAB uses 128 kbps MP2. And MP3 is a far better codec to use at 128 kbps than MP2 is, that's for sure. To be fair, speech on DAB isn't the main problem. The main problem is music. BTW, the BBC's live and listen again streams should be moving over to using AAC/AAC+ over the next week or two (if you're not aware, AAC/AAC+ is an excellent codec). And the bit rates should increase over time, because Internet bandwidth costs are plummetting. I'm glad to hear it. Stick to DAB if you like, but you'd be sticking with the lowest quality digital platform. You mistake. I am not "sticking with DAB", I rarely listen to it. You have actually been continually sticking up for DAB's audio quality in this thread as a whole. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"David Looser" wrote in message
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... But the BBC is extremely biased against Internet radio, so the BBC is going to push everyone forcefully towards DAB whether that's the best system for them or not. That's the point. Is it? well well, so all those BBC internet streams are a figment of my imagination are they? Where did I say that? Hint: I didn't. I said "push everyone forcefully towards DAB". That's correct. That may be your opinion, but it's far from being a fact, as the existence of internet streams clearly demonstrates. I see no "push" towards DAB, and you have failed to demonstrate that there is one. 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB versus zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio. Does that indicate platform-neutrality? -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Don Pearce wrote in message news:49951dcb.337776187@localhost
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:53:27 GMT, Rob wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob The DAB actually has more bass than the MW, although they both bottom out at 42Hz (low E on the bass guitar). The MW has more level in the mid-lows 100 to 500Hz, which gives a perception of warmth. That is what you are hearing. The MW is exactly what my mother would have described as mellow years ago. My DAB radio lives by the bed, where it wakes me up and lets me hear the occasional BBC7 programme late at night. The mw radio lives in the kitchen - where it belongs (only I never use mw, just fm). All serious listening is courtesy of Freeview. Is your serious listening going to be via Freeview when the BBC's Internet streams provide higher quality? -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Don Pearce wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:53:27 GMT, Rob wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob The DAB actually has more bass than the MW, although they both bottom out at 42Hz (low E on the bass guitar). The MW has more level in the mid-lows 100 to 500Hz, which gives a perception of warmth. That is what you are hearing. The MW is exactly what my mother would have described as mellow years ago. Yes, i'd go with mellow. But that DAB extract couldn't be much more than 'grating'?! My DAB radio lives by the bed, where it wakes me up and lets me hear the occasional BBC7 programme late at night. The mw radio lives in the kitchen - where it belongs (only I never use mw, just fm). All serious listening is courtesy of Freeview. Well, it just shows. I didn't/don't mind DAB at all for speech (R4, 70% of my radio listening), but then I don't mind the FM clock radio. If I listen to pop radio (R6, from time to time, Gideon Coe, Tom Robinson) I'm afraid I prefer FM to DAB and FTV. Curiously, I think classical (R3) sounds excellent on FTV and just fine on DAB - but then I only really listen to classical in the car - and I might as well have a cassette, as it's a noisy car (Mini). People I know who've 'adopted' DAB like it for it's sound, in the sense there's little interference, and nothing to do with fidelity. Also, the sense of choice and convenience - presets, and my brother likes sport, for example. The inconvenience of aerial and lack of convenience features are nothing to me. I would, however, like R6 on FM, which ain't going to happen. Make of that what you will :-) Rob |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 18:24:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB"
wrote: Don Pearce wrote in message news:49951dcb.337776187@localhost On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:53:27 GMT, Rob wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob The DAB actually has more bass than the MW, although they both bottom out at 42Hz (low E on the bass guitar). The MW has more level in the mid-lows 100 to 500Hz, which gives a perception of warmth. That is what you are hearing. The MW is exactly what my mother would have described as mellow years ago. My DAB radio lives by the bed, where it wakes me up and lets me hear the occasional BBC7 programme late at night. The mw radio lives in the kitchen - where it belongs (only I never use mw, just fm). All serious listening is courtesy of Freeview. Is your serious listening going to be via Freeview when the BBC's Internet streams provide higher quality? You really think I want a pc in my living room? I'm starting to build a picture of the way you live, and it is mostly week-old pot noodle containers and used socks. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Rob wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: Note that you need a RO machine for the system to work. (It may work with an emulator, but I can't say.) However the code for what I'm using is based on source code provided as an example. This is in 'C' so if you can follow 'C' you can read it. http://users.skynet.be/Andre.Timmerm...r/download.htm Ah, right, I see. I can't see the stream capture plugin, but that was all I meant - and you seem to be using it. I was confused by your original phrase 'recording a stream of music'. I'd just adopted 'capture' because that's what the young people tend to use: record sound, capture data. I'm more used to the idea that we record data or music. For getting the info from a URL I'd be more likely to say 'fetch' and then 'record'. RO is 'modular', so any program can call on other sections of the code provided. This makes it easy for a program to treat a URL as if it were a file on your machine - provided the fetching then can work OK. e.g. you haven't bungled the URL and have a suitable connection. The advantage is that RO programs can avoid repeated re-inventions of wheels. This means most RO applications are quite compact, as is the OS. V. nice. I used to have a passing interest in Windows and DOS, but recently fled to Mac because I decided, once and for all, that I just wanted it to work and be done with all the .exe and .bat and .dll things. But that means that to understand the process fully you'd also need to see what the PlaySample module and the URL fetching code are doing. I can't comment on that as I haven't looked at it. Just use them via the interfaces they provide. And what a marvellous piece of software function over style it seems :-) Not sure if you are referring to Andre's programming style or the way RO tends to work. ;- Well, the screenshots remind me of Windows 3.1. Although in all honesty if it works, go with it. I find Mac apps look like something out of (what i might imagine to be) a child's nightmare. But they just toddle along in a *consistent and reliable* sort of way. My own programs are nightmares as I rarely comment and often hack until it sort-of-works... [snip] ... Luck, a grim determination, work and money. Actually, not *too* much money - about £300 for cutting edge hardware, £30 for something that works. Pleased to see they outstrip Intel's latest on power consumption. And pleased, obviously, that you're happy with it. You can't budget for irrationality. I'd prefer to travel by steam train and listen to music amplified by valves. All to do with the journey, apparently. The drawbacks with RO machines tend to be limited hardware, and lack of 'compatability' with widely used proprietary filetypes/methods. Hence the snag when people use some formats for net radio. 'Real' because of its proprietary nature, 'aac' because no-one has yet done the decoder for RO. :-) But the advantage (for me) is that the RO systems are quite simple to use, and work with an efficiency that belies the crude measures like cpu speed and available ram.[1] Of course, this also is because it is what I'm used to and like. Just like a preference for steam train or valve amps. What suits best depends on who you are, what you wish to do, and the style in which you wish to do it. :-) Quite, wouldn't argue with that at all. [1] Analogy here with the point about not just judging cameras by 'megapixels' but also checking things like the lens capability and how well the images are encoded. However the above is all straying OT... :-) Indeed. Life bumbles along :-) rob |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"Don Pearce" wrote in message
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 18:24:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote: Don Pearce wrote in message news:49951dcb.337776187@localhost On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:53:27 GMT, Rob wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:13:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I see you've snipped what I was responding to, so here's what Plowman said: "BTW - I've never heard a decent DAB radio sound as bad as MW." So I was saying that Kerrang on DAB sounds as bad as MW. Nice to see your logic is as always. But if you take just one parameter, Kerrang on DAB is plainly transmitting higher frequencies than you'll get off any AM broadcast. If you can't hear that it explains a lot. OK this needs to be settled. I've recorded 10 seconds of Kerrang from DAB, followed by 10 seconds of a MW pop station, both from decent tuners. As far as I am concerned there is no contest - DAB wins hands down. Van Gogh would have heard the difference. The DAB goes to 12kHz, the mw is dying by 4kHz. http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 d That's interesting, thanks for taking the trouble. FWIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Rob The DAB actually has more bass than the MW, although they both bottom out at 42Hz (low E on the bass guitar). The MW has more level in the mid-lows 100 to 500Hz, which gives a perception of warmth. That is what you are hearing. The MW is exactly what my mother would have described as mellow years ago. My DAB radio lives by the bed, where it wakes me up and lets me hear the occasional BBC7 programme late at night. The mw radio lives in the kitchen - where it belongs (only I never use mw, just fm). All serious listening is courtesy of Freeview. Is your serious listening going to be via Freeview when the BBC's Internet streams provide higher quality? You really think I want a pc in my living room? I've no idea. You could get a Squeezebox 3 instead: http://www.slimdevices.com/pi_squeezebox.html I'm starting to build a picture of the way you live, and it is mostly week-old pot noodle containers and used socks. That's such an uncanny description of my life it's as if you're able to look in on my world through my non-existent webcam. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message
... 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB versus zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio. Does that indicate platform-neutrality? Can't say I'd noticed any TV adverts for DAB, though I have seen many for I-Player. And of course "listen again" is trailed after almost every radio programme that is available on it. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote:
Don Pearce wrote in message news:49941ae5.337034484@localhost On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 17:37:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message You storm in here like some juvenile bully, spewing your venom at everybody and expect to be taken seriously? Blimey! I'm not exactly insecure about my knowledge, so I have no need for it to be validated by people on here, thanks. I came on here, noticed a thread, read the thread, noticed a whole lot of nonsense being spewed, and I've replied to some of that nonsense so that these people can see the error of their ways. That's it, really, and I'll be off when I choose. In fact, I think I'll stay a bit longer than I was going to now you've tried to tell me what to do I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. I don't even know who that is. I'd say Phil is someone who knows his subject (audio engineering), and is quick to criticise anyone (novice to expert) who suggests anything that differs with his opinion. His manner of criticism is, well, unique. His presence is interesting because I've rarely seen a thread end on a reasoned critique of his technical analysis - almost always his manner. He rarely *needs* to concede a technical point. Familiar? :-) This NG has changed over the past couple of years to a technical forum - it's less about 'recreational audio', and more about uncritical correlation between measurement and good sound. it's not really about communicating audio. As a result it's lost some valuable and lively contributors from many points of view. I have a passing interest in audio technology so I listen in the wings. Rob |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus In article , tony sayer wrote: I reckon that Dab as we know it will die away left behind by other radio tech, and theres still no firm date for digital changeover indeed a lot of the commercial sector can't afford to run DAB and FM transmissions.. If enough pull out of DAB it will force the 'rental' costs down. They were ludicrous to start with. Apart from a monopoly transmission provider the other is that one company own's the multiplex!... -- Tony Sayer |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , David Looser
scribeth thus "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... But the BBC is extremely biased against Internet radio, so the BBC is going to push everyone forcefully towards DAB whether that's the best system for them or not. That's the point. Is it? well well, so all those BBC internet streams are a figment of my imagination are they? Where did I say that? Hint: I didn't. I said "push everyone forcefully towards DAB". That's correct. That may be your opinion, but it's far from being a fact, as the existence of internet streams clearly demonstrates. I see no "push" towards DAB, and you have failed to demonstrate that there is one. David. Read Lord Carter's "Digital Britain" report from a week or two ago..... -- Tony Sayer |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , Rob
scribeth thus BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: Don Pearce wrote in message news:49941ae5.337034484@localhost On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 17:37:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message You storm in here like some juvenile bully, spewing your venom at everybody and expect to be taken seriously? Blimey! I'm not exactly insecure about my knowledge, so I have no need for it to be validated by people on here, thanks. I came on here, noticed a thread, read the thread, noticed a whole lot of nonsense being spewed, and I've replied to some of that nonsense so that these people can see the error of their ways. That's it, really, and I'll be off when I choose. In fact, I think I'll stay a bit longer than I was going to now you've tried to tell me what to do I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. I don't even know who that is. I'd say Phil is someone who knows his subject (audio engineering), and is quick to criticise anyone (novice to expert) who suggests anything that differs with his opinion. His manner of criticism is, well, unique. His presence is interesting because I've rarely seen a thread end on a reasoned critique of his technical analysis - almost always his manner. He rarely *needs* to concede a technical point. Familiar? :-) This NG has changed over the past couple of years to a technical forum - it's less about 'recreational audio', and more about uncritical correlation between measurement and good sound. it's not really about communicating audio. As a result it's lost some valuable and lively contributors from many points of view. I have a passing interest in audio technology so I listen in the wings. Rob No Steve is right about a lot of the shortcomings of UK T-_DAB and theres a lot more wrong with the system we're having foisted on us as the new Digital prime Radio transmission medium for the UK than sound quality... However Phil Allison is just a totally different case;!... -- Tony Sayer |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"David Looser" wrote in message
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB versus zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio. Does that indicate platform-neutrality? Can't say I'd noticed any TV adverts for DAB, though I have seen many for I-Player. Then you're a liar. And of course "listen again" is trailed after almost every radio programme that is available on it. Try "after some" rather than "after almost every" and you'd be closer to the mark. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"Rob" wrote in message
om BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: Don Pearce wrote in message news:49941ae5.337034484@localhost On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 17:37:23 -0000, "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message You storm in here like some juvenile bully, spewing your venom at everybody and expect to be taken seriously? Blimey! I'm not exactly insecure about my knowledge, so I have no need for it to be validated by people on here, thanks. I came on here, noticed a thread, read the thread, noticed a whole lot of nonsense being spewed, and I've replied to some of that nonsense so that these people can see the error of their ways. That's it, really, and I'll be off when I choose. In fact, I think I'll stay a bit longer than I was going to now you've tried to tell me what to do I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. I don't even know who that is. I'd say Phil is someone who knows his subject (audio engineering), and is quick to criticise anyone (novice to expert) who suggests anything that differs with his opinion. His manner of criticism is, well, unique. His presence is interesting because I've rarely seen a thread end on a reasoned critique of his technical analysis - almost always his manner. He rarely *needs* to concede a technical point. Familiar? :-) Sure. At the end of the day though, I read the whole thread through, marked the ones I disagreed with, and there were so many that I didn't have any time for the pleasantries! ;-) Anyway, Lesurf can't see beyond Radio 3, and he just says that it's better on DAB merely because of the dynamic range compression on FM, therefore ignoring that FM actually carries the sound that's fed into the system at higher fidelity than DAB. Plowman is *just* an incorrigible fool. The end. Don't know David Looser, but his posts made him sound full of himself, so I didn't feel the need to hold back with him either. Mainly it's Plowman and his nonsense that bugs me though, so whenever he's about we invariably end up arguing. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"Rob" wrote in message
om... Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. It's important to realise that prejudice actually does alter perception. That is why double-blind testing is so vital in any listening test. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message
... Don't know David Looser, but his posts made him sound full of himself, so I didn't feel the need to hold back with him either. Pot, Kettle, Black :-) David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message
... "David Looser" wrote in message "BBC is biased towards DAB" wrote in message ... 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB versus zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio. Does that indicate platform-neutrality? Can't say I'd noticed any TV adverts for DAB, though I have seen many for I-Player. Then you're a liar. Since you cannot possibly know what I have, and haven't noticed that comment is arrogant nonesense. And of course "listen again" is trailed after almost every radio programme that is available on it. Try "after some" rather than "after almost every" and you'd be closer to the mark. Some, Most, whatever. The fact of the matter is that listen again is advertised many times a day on Radio 4, whilst DAB only gets mentioned in passing. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"David Looser" wrote in message
"Rob" wrote in message om... Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. It's important to realise that prejudice actually does alter perception. It would have to alter if a hell of a long way to make DAB sound as good as FM. Just get a tuner that performs well on both, and press the 'band' button to switch between DAB and FM when you've got the same station on both bands. There's no contest, so forget your double blind testing in this instance, it really isn't needed at all. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"tony sayer" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser scribeth thus That may be your opinion, but it's far from being a fact, as the existence of internet streams clearly demonstrates. I see no "push" towards DAB, and you have failed to demonstrate that there is one. David. Read Lord Carter's "Digital Britain" report from a week or two ago..... -- Thanks for the suggestion, it was an interesting read. But Steve is pointing his guns in the wrong direction, he is arguing that the *BBC* is biased towards DAB, but Lord Carter's report was made for the government, not the BBC. You know, the idea that the government can make DAB the "primary network" for radio seriously overestimates their power. If the public wont buy DAB sets (and they've had one of the slowest uptakes of any new consumer product in recent years) then the government can't make them. I note that even Ofcom is shying away from coming up with a switch off date for analogue radio. There have been many examples of the powers-that-be being wrong footed by the public (such as the domestic take-up of the internet itself, the government had to play catch-up pretty damn fast), I suspect this is yet another. Personally I find the idea of internet radio unattractive, far too geeky for my liking, and it ties you down to the broadband socket. So I think we do need DAB, preferably DAB+. But for now I'll stay with FM. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"David Looser" wrote in message
"tony sayer" wrote in message ... In article , David Looser scribeth thus That may be your opinion, but it's far from being a fact, as the existence of internet streams clearly demonstrates. I see no "push" towards DAB, and you have failed to demonstrate that there is one. David. Read Lord Carter's "Digital Britain" report from a week or two ago..... -- Thanks for the suggestion, it was an interesting read. But Steve is pointing his guns in the wrong direction, he is arguing that the *BBC* is biased towards DAB, but Lord Carter's report was made for the government, not the BBC. Don't try to lecture me about any of this. My guns are directed precisely in the right direction. All Stephen Carter's Digital Britain report (which *is* a government report, not made for government - Carter is the Communications minister) is doing is supporting the recommendations made to government by the Digital Radio Working Group (DRWG), and the Technology sub-group within the DRWG was the group that actually chose which digital radio platforms should be included and excluded, and the person who chaired the Technology sub-group was the BBC controller in charge of digital radio. The BBC also has teh power to veto any of the recommendations - what are the rest of the radio industry going to do if the BBC doesn't support them? Nothing they can do. The BBC is responsible for screwing consumers in order to protect its audiences. Simple as that. You know, the idea that the government can make DAB the "primary network" for radio seriously overestimates their power. The Digital Britain report actually said "a primary network", not "the primary network", actually (or main network or whatever). If the public wont buy DAB sets (and they've had one of the slowest uptakes of any new consumer product in recent years) then the government can't make them. The BBC can push them in one way or another via their TV adverts though. I note that even Ofcom is shying away from coming up with a switch off date for analogue radio. That's because it's years away: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/20...choff_date.php There have been many examples of the powers-that-be being wrong footed by the public (such as the domestic take-up of the internet itself, the government had to play catch-up pretty damn fast), I suspect this is yet another. Personally I find the idea of internet radio unattractive, far too geeky for my liking, and it ties you down to the broadband socket. I've asked you what on earth you mean by that before, but you haven't explained yet. So, I ask again, what do you mean by it tying down your broadband socket?? So I think we do need DAB, preferably DAB+. But for now I'll stay with FM. We don't *need* DAB or DAB+. There are other options to DAB/DAB+. -- Steve - www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info The adoption of DAB was the most incompetent technical decision ever made in the history of UK broadcasting: http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/da...ion_of_dab.htm |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: Just had a brief listen for the first time ever. Sounds exactly the same as any other pop station. The fact that you'd say that speaks volumes about this entire issue. OK then - how does it sound different from any other pop station in terms of audio quality? You suggested poorer frequency response - which would be the most obvious thing since you said MW sounded better. And my brief listen said it was pretty normal - and with about a couple of octave more than AM. Nor was their any obvious distortion - their limiters were doing their job. Again, exactly like all other pop stations. And far better quality than off MW. Listening to it now. It has improved since I last heard it, and I'd put it at just above MW now - a triumph for 21st century digital radio. Ah right. Perhaps an apology would be in order? Previously it was worse than MW. Seriously. And I bet the one you can hear is **** as well, but you won't admit that, because it doesn't suit your argument. What are you on about? A serious question - does your hearing cut off at under 5 kHz? Fool. Perfectly reasonable question given your statements. -- *Sherlock Holmes never said "Elementary, my dear Watson" * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: http://81.174.169.10/odds/dab_mw.mp3 Both are ****, but for different reasons. To be honest, I could listen to the MW for longer than I could the DAB version before resorting to pulling my wisdom teeth out to distract my mind from the pain. Try using an LP filter on DAB, then, if you don't like anything over 4 kHz. -- *Heart attacks... God's revenge for eating his animal friends Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
Rob wrote: WIW I much prefer the MW (second) part from that extract from what little music I can hear - the DAB sounds as if it's coming from an echo chamber, bass turned down, treble turned right up, tinny. The MW sounds focussed, muffled, treble turned right down, artificially bassy, sonorous. I buy on average a DAB radio each year, thinking I might like it/what's not to like. Then within a month or so I sell it or give it away, and go back to one of the cheap portable FM radios I have. Perhaps FM masks the compression, perhaps blind prejudice, perhaps FM does 'sound better'. Peter Walker of Quad fame had it right - the wider you open the window the more the s**t comes in. All these pop stations are over processed, which makes them sound even more harsh. AM removes most of the HF and with it some of that harshness. -- *I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: 21 TV ad campaigns for DAB versus zero TV ad campaigns for Internet radio. Does that indicate platform-neutrality? Try listening to R4. They are forever plugging Listen Again - and hardly ever even mention DAB. Why are you so concerned about what TV does as regards radio? It would be fair enough if you were simply complaining about adverts on BBC TV - but of course being you everything is a conspiracy. -- *Snowmen fall from Heaven unassembled* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
Don Pearce wrote: Is your serious listening going to be via Freeview when the BBC's Internet streams provide higher quality? You really think I want a pc in my living room? I'm starting to build a picture of the way you live, and it is mostly week-old pot noodle containers and used socks. Obviously a bedsit. He certainly doesn't appreciate how the majority use radio. -- *The statement below is true. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: I came on here, noticed a thread, read the thread, noticed a whole lot of nonsense being spewed, and I've replied to some of that nonsense so that these people can see the error of their ways. That's it, really, and I'll be off when I choose. In fact, I think I'll stay a bit longer than I was going to now you've tried to tell me what to do I'm beginning to wonder if you are perhaps a sock puppet of Phil Allison's. I don't even know who that is. You've certainly been caught out here again. Let me quote you from earlier *********** From: BBC is biased towards DAB Subject: Internet radio - classical music, etc Date: Sun, 08 Feb 2009 16:55 Newsgroups: uk.rec.audio Wondered when you'd turn up. Your search on DAB topics seems a bit slow compared to usual. I don't search for DAB topics - I just stumbled across this thread. ************ If you were even an occasional reader of this group - or any other audio one - you'd know about Allison. But then you've turned up on other groups I read as soon as DAB is mentioned - and then disappear just as quickly. -- *Support bacteria - they're the only culture some people have * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: Sure. At the end of the day though, I read the whole thread through, marked the ones I disagreed with, and there were so many that I didn't have any time for the pleasantries! ;-) Anyway, Lesurf can't see beyond Radio 3, and he just says that it's better on DAB merely because of the dynamic range compression on FM, therefore ignoring that FM actually carries the sound that's fed into the system at higher fidelity than DAB. Define 'higher fidelity' Plowman is *just* an incorrigible fool. The end. One who has actually conducted some tests to see if 'the man in the street' can reliably tell 'that DAB sounds worse than FM' and has found it not proved. Have you? Don't know David Looser, but his posts made him sound full of himself, so I didn't feel the need to hold back with him either. Mainly it's Plowman and his nonsense that bugs me though, so whenever he's about we invariably end up arguing. Well, you should stop chasing me round newsgroups. I read a variety - and that would be easily checked. You only turn up on them when DAB is mentioned. -- *If one synchronized swimmer drowns, do the rest have to drown too? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
BBC is biased towards DAB wrote: Just get a tuner that performs well on both, and press the 'band' button to switch between DAB and FM when you've got the same station on both bands. There's no contest, so forget your double blind testing in this instance, it really isn't needed at all. It would be worthwhile if you read up on conducting proper double blind testing. Otherwise it puts you in the same camp as those who say a 'posh' mains cable makes their amp sound better. -- *I'm planning to be spontaneous tomorrow * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Mike O'Sullivan wrote: I remember driving round Birmingham on a coach equipped with a demonstration system long before actual transmissions started - and the difference in reception between that and FM was quite astounding. A high bit rate I'd imagine, it being a demo, not the real commercial world. Nope - IIRC the same bitrates as used at the start of the service. the current reduced ones came later. But just to point out, bitrates have little to do with actual reception. Did you mean to say "bitrates have little to do with actual sound quality" ? |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:56 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk