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Internet radio - classical music, etc
"tony sayer" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser scribeth thus "tony sayer" wrote in message ... Well the number of the bits and the way you use them do affect the quality of both Sound and Vision;!.. -- Indeed, but it's not necessarily the case that it's "more bits the better". Some recent digital cameras with high "megapixel counts" produce poorer pictures than older ones with fewer megapixels. Why do you think that is?.. Lens quality, imager quality, DSP algorithm quality......But whilst the megapixel count is mentioned in characters a foot high in the ads, the lens is hardly mentioned, and the other two not at all. Not surprisingly the public tend to get the idea that megapixels is all that matters. In digital audio systems a lot is dependent on the codec in use and MP 2 which is what DAB uses wasn't designed for use at 112K or so whereas AAC was!.. -- Indeed. Back in the early '90s I was employed in professional comparative listening tests of low bit rate (8 - 9.6kb/s) voice codecs. The differences between them were marked, but that didn't necessarily make it easy to pick a "best". One might produce the most natural speech when there were no errors in the bit stream, whilst another might cope far better under high error-rate conditions. It could also depend on voices, tests were carried out with a variety of languages (using appropriate listening test panels) to avoid "language bias". So yes, I do know a bit about listening tests and codec dependency! David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"tony sayer" wrote in message
... Its only in recent times that they have had an opportunity to downgrade it owing to the bitrates they can set it at.. You'd never hear someone from the pre digital times saying that they could -downgrade- the transmission system in use. Rubbish!. AM radio was downgraded by reducing it's bandwidth from 9kHz to 4.5kHz betwen the 1930s and the 1960s. Oddly enough DAB was developed with the intention of making it all better .. Reception and audio quality!.. Was it? evidence? The problem is that what is good enough for the bulk of the audience may not satisfy the enthusiasts, how much cost do you impose on the system to satisfy a small minority? I wouldn't say it has to satisfy the enthusiasts as such but one would have hoped for something as good as the existing system - or better would have been used.. I am not persuaded that, taking all real-world factors into account, DAB is not at least as good as FM. In the particular case of DAB I think a small improvement is justified, as it can be done at little extra cost. But even as things are now the notion that DAB is clearly worse than FM is challenged by some serious commentators. Well cost = MUX bitspace so it isn't that simple and seeing that the UK is going to be lumbered with the ancient system we have whereas other countries are adopting better ones!.. It's important to adopt common standards with other countries. And now would be a good time to do so. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , Rob
scribeth thus David Looser wrote: "Rob" wrote in message om... Of course. In fairness the centre of the DAB 'whinge' was always that it could have been so much better, and not that it was/is intrinsically bad. 'Better', as you seem to suggest below, can't always be detected even if it has theoretical advantages. Of course it could have been better, broadcasting quality is a compromise between performance and cost, always has been. The broadcaster's aim is to provide a quality that is "good enough" without being too expensive, both for themselves and the buyers of receiving equipment. The problem is that what is good enough for the bulk of the audience may not satisfy the enthusiasts, how much cost do you impose on the system to satisfy a small minority? I don't know the costs of transmitting at higher quality. Presumably you know they are prohibitive ... Its the multiplex system where each MUX has so many bits . Course the more bits the less services you can carry. And bitz cost;!.. In the particular case of DAB I think a small improvement is justified, as it can be done at little extra cost. But even as things are now the notion that DAB is clearly worse than FM is challenged by some serious commentators. ... and even if implemented, not worthwhile? Debatable till the cows come home;!.. -- Tony Sayer |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , David Looser
scribeth thus "tony sayer" wrote in message ... In article , David Looser scribeth thus "tony sayer" wrote in message ... Well the number of the bits and the way you use them do affect the quality of both Sound and Vision;!.. -- Indeed, but it's not necessarily the case that it's "more bits the better". Some recent digital cameras with high "megapixel counts" produce poorer pictures than older ones with fewer megapixels. Why do you think that is?.. Lens quality, imager quality, DSP algorithm quality......But whilst the megapixel count is mentioned in characters a foot high in the ads, the lens is hardly mentioned, and the other two not at all. Not surprisingly the public tend to get the idea that megapixels is all that matters. Yes .. Oddly enough my 8 M/pixel produces worse pix than the old 3.5 one!.. And isn't that wonderful compared with the wife's ancient Canon.. In digital audio systems a lot is dependent on the codec in use and MP 2 which is what DAB uses wasn't designed for use at 112K or so whereas AAC was!.. -- Indeed. Back in the early '90s I was employed in professional comparative listening tests of low bit rate (8 - 9.6kb/s) voice codecs. The differences between them were marked, but that didn't necessarily make it easy to pick a "best". One might produce the most natural speech when there were no errors in the bit stream, whilst another might cope far better under high error-rate conditions. It could also depend on voices, tests were carried out with a variety of languages (using appropriate listening test panels) to avoid "language bias". So yes, I do know a bit about listening tests and codec dependency! You went involved in the MP2 codec tests for the development of DAB?.. David. -- Tony Sayer |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"tony sayer" wrote in message
... You went involved in the MP2 codec tests for the development of DAB?.. No, voice codecs only, but the principle is the same. More to the point I know just how hard it is, and the lengths we had to go to, to eliminate bias from listening tests. David. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , tony sayer
wrote: In article , Dave Plowman (News) scribeth thus In article , tony sayer wrote: I don't supposed you've listened to that much net radio .. some indeed is poor but some is very good... The same applies to DAB - and FM. To me the processing which is applied *in spades* to all the light music stations is far more annoying than the low bit rates on DAB. I'd rather not listen to badly set compressors pumping away. Thats not a function of the transmission system just how broadcasters use it!.. Perhaps that's the difference between us. I'm only interested in the sound I hear in my room. I don't really care how it is unacceptably degraded. -- *Forget the Joneses, I keep us up with the Simpsons. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
"tony sayer" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser scribeth thus "tony sayer" wrote in message ... Its only in recent times that they have had an opportunity to downgrade it owing to the bitrates they can set it at.. You'd never hear someone from the pre digital times saying that they could -downgrade- the transmission system in use. Rubbish!. AM radio was downgraded by reducing it's bandwidth from 9kHz to 4.5kHz betwen the 1930s and the 1960s. Could you qualify that please? AM radio, AFAIK, has always has an audio frequency response limit of 4KHz which means it needs an RF bandwidth of 8KHz. The station spacing is thus set at 9KHz to (theoretically) leave a guard band between stations. In practice for most domestic radios this is of little consequence as it would be nigh impossible to hear two stations on adjacent frequencies - something that would be possible on a commercial/professional receiver with a much more closely controlled passband. -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article , David Looser
wrote: "tony sayer" wrote in message ... You went involved in the MP2 codec tests for the development of DAB?.. No, voice codecs only, but the principle is the same. More to the point I know just how hard it is, and the lengths we had to go to, to eliminate bias from listening tests. FWIW I've now had a chance to record some mp3 streams 'broadcast' by some of the net stations. This meant I could write the results onto a CDRW and listen to them on some players. Have examples at 128/192/256kbps. What I've found interesting is that the results *didn't* show that the 'higher the bitrate the better the sound'. This was a totally uncontrolled test, so is suspect, but it does strengthen my bias towards feeling that the way the specific encoder is used (and the details of the sound patterns to be encoded) can matter more that the output bitrate chosen. Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Internet radio - classical music, etc
In article ,
Woody wrote: Rubbish!. AM radio was downgraded by reducing it's bandwidth from 9kHz to 4.5kHz betwen the 1930s and the 1960s. Could you qualify that please? AM radio, AFAIK, has always has an audio frequency response limit of 4KHz which means it needs an RF bandwidth of 8KHz. The station spacing is thus set at 9KHz to (theoretically) leave a guard band between stations. In practice for most domestic radios this is of little consequence as it would be nigh impossible to hear two stations on adjacent frequencies - something that would be possible on a commercial/professional receiver with a much more closely controlled passband. Not so - the changes making the 9 kHz an international standard came in on IIRC the early '70s. When R1 started up in the London area the 247 metre transmissions had a bandwidth exceeding 12 kHz - the landline feeding that transmitter was also wide band. With a good AM receiver the frequency response didn't sound much different to FM when R1&2 did simulcasts. -- *Nostalgia isn't what is used to be. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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