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#1
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Take a listen to the AM Stereo airchecks on this site:
http://www.1240keva.com/airchecks/ KEVA is an 880-watt Class C station in Evanston, Wyoming, using a vintage McMartin vacuum tube (valve) transmitter and a complete 1983-era audio chain: a CRL AM Stereo Preparation Processor, a CRL AM Stereo Maxtrix Processor, and a Motorola C-Quam AM Stereo Exciter. The audio in the MP3 clips was recorded from KEVA's Motorola AM Stereo Modulation Monitor, so you are hearing KEVA exactly as they sound on the air -- not from a direct feed from their audio board. Now, for those of you who have heard IBOC or DRM... can digital AM ever sound this good? I don't think so... there's only so much quality you can squeeze out of a 20 to 36 kbps data stream. At this point, neither IBOC nor DRM have managed to eliminate the swishy, gritty, phasey, heavily artifacted "28.8K RealAudio Web-Cast" type of sound from their digital audio. And except for a MAJOR revolution in the science of "lossy" audio compression, I don't think they ever will. Digital does have its advantages... but not in AM audio quality! |
#2
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Salutations:
WBRW wrote: Take a listen to the AM Stereo airchecks on this site: http://www.1240keva.com/airchecks/ KEVA is an 880-watt Class C station in Evanston, Wyoming, using a vintage McMartin vacuum tube (valve) transmitter and a complete 1983-era audio chain: a CRL AM Stereo Preparation Processor, a CRL AM Stereo Maxtrix Processor, and a Motorola C-Quam AM Stereo Exciter. The audio in the MP3 clips was recorded from KEVA's Motorola AM Stereo Modulation Monitor, so you are hearing KEVA exactly as they sound on the air -- not from a direct feed from their audio board. Now, for those of you who have heard IBOC or DRM... can digital AM ever sound this good? I don't think so... there's only so much quality you can squeeze out of a 20 to 36 kbps data stream. At this point, neither IBOC nor DRM have managed to eliminate the swishy, gritty, phasey, heavily artifacted "28.8K RealAudio Web-Cast" type of sound from their digital audio. And except for a MAJOR revolution in the science of "lossy" audio compression, I don't think they ever will. Digital does have its advantages... but not in AM audio quality! I agree broadly with your conclusions regarding IBOC/DRM - however - you are incorrect in labelling low kbps RealAudio as being completely awful.. It depends on the site specification regarding the codex and how carefully the site administrator works on the sound objects/transaction model prior to conversion.. I'm generating very close to AM stereo quality RealAudio at fixed 20kbs without that 'bottom of the well' sound or any buffer problems on low speed connections world-wide - have a poke around the site below.. I run 40-45 streams per 1mbs of outbound pipe and still feed a general site through the same server head.. I have picked up a number of wireless/mobile users over the past year given that my feed doesn't overload their available bandwidth at the CPU while still providing a pretty sound quality at G2+ and I have been suggesting on and off that WiFi may provide for a better over all software based receiver model.. I can do the same with video feeds - but that limits the feeds to about 20 streams per 1mbs or pipe and advanced Flash/SMIL falls somewhere around 30 feeds per 1mbs outbound.. I apologize and say again that I'm not really a RealAudio zealot or anything - I can't even get them to list my little bitcaster on their site.. But credit where it is due - it's a pretty good codex and multi-media streaming solution overall.. Broadly ported to *many* operating systems and codex too.. I wonder now if the same model applies to IBOC/DRM.. Can you force minimum kbps before accepting transmission as viable? If so - does it improve the quality at the receiver head while limiting some of the problems you have outlined? A LOT of the complaints related to RealAudio have MUCH more to do with bitcasters cheaping out, not really understanding the details at the server/codex or trying to mess around client side for the marketing bulls rather than anything particularly wrong with the particular multi-media solution itself.. -- J Dexter - webmaster - http://www.dexterdyne.org/ all tunes - no cookies no subscription no weather no ads no news no phone in - RealAudio 8+ Required - all the Time Radio Free Dexterdyne Top Tune o'be-do-da-day Sinatra Martin Davis - Ain't That A Kick in the Head http://www.dexterdyne.org/888/036.RAM |
#3
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Can Digital AM ever sound good?
Not as good as analog. Analog cell phones sound better than digital cell phones. Analog Laser Discs look better than digital DVDs. Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. Why would digital AM sound better than analog AM? |
#4
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Joe Blow wrote:
Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast. As for digital cable -- as overcompressed as it typically is, it should hardly be used as an example of what digital is capable of. |
#5
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The concern of analog supporter is not what digital is capable of but what
it invariably devolves into, a mechanism for adding saleable minutes at the expense of audio or video fidelity. Jerome "Tom Desmond" wrote in message ... Joe Blow wrote: Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast. As for digital cable -- as overcompressed as it typically is, it should hardly be used as an example of what digital is capable of. |
#6
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In article , Tom Desmond
writes Joe Blow wrote: Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast. Well you must have some terrible analogue signals where you are if you reckon that DTV is better!.. Our off air analogue from Sandy Heath out does DTV all the time and the NICAM sound is better that the MPEG equivalent.. As for digital cable -- as overcompressed as it typically is, it should hardly be used as an example of what digital is capable of. -- Tony Sayer |
#7
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tony sayer wrote:
In article , Tom Desmond writes Joe Blow wrote: Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast. Well you must have some terrible analogue signals where you are if you reckon that DTV is better!.. Our off air analogue from Sandy Heath out does DTV all the time and the NICAM sound is better that the MPEG equivalent.. As for digital cable -- as overcompressed as it typically is, it should hardly be used as an example of what digital is capable of. -- Tony Sayer It think that I may have written "And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast." And that is true ... OTA DTV looks astoundingly better than analog cable or broadcast. Really. There is simply no quibble possible. Of course I was referring to the situation in the United States (or Australia) where we have HDTV, not in backward places like Europe. Doug McDonald |
#8
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In article , Doug McDonald
writes tony sayer wrote: In article , Tom Desmond writes Joe Blow wrote: Analog cable looks and sounds better than digital cable. And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast. Well you must have some terrible analogue signals where you are if you reckon that DTV is better!.. Our off air analogue from Sandy Heath out does DTV all the time and the NICAM sound is better that the MPEG equivalent.. As for digital cable -- as overcompressed as it typically is, it should hardly be used as an example of what digital is capable of. -- Tony Sayer It think that I may have written "And both look terrible compared to over-the-air DTV, which can far exceed the quality of analog cable or analog broadcast." And that is true ... OTA DTV looks astoundingly better than analog cable or broadcast. Really. There is simply no quibble possible. Of course I was referring to the situation in the United States (or Australia) where we have HDTV, not in backward places like Europe. Doug McDonald Well he would say that, wouldn't he!.. -- Tony Sayer |
#9
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#10
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"Jake Brodsky" wrote in message ...
The beauty of digital broadcasting is that it works better overall in a wider variety of conditions and the radio doesn't have to be outrageously large, heavy, expensive, or high maintenance. TRANSLATION: You will learn to like digital broadcasting because we can provide it very cheaply, and we're looking for numbers, not quality. |
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