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![]() Mike Terry wrote: 28 July 2004 Clear Channel are leading American radio and speeding up the industry's adoption of digital technology and has agreed a deal to make 1,000 of its stations digital. The broadcaster will use the iBiquity, in-band HD system, developed by iBiquity Digital Corporation, a company in which Clear Channel has a small interest. By 2007 San Antonion-based Clear Channel expects to convert 95 per cent of its 1,200 AM and FM stations to digital in its top 100 markets, which include the Baltimore-Washington area, as well as New York and Cincinnati. Initially the conversion will cost about £70,000 a station, but the price is expected to decrease as the R & D costs are reclaimed. http://www.theradiomagazine.co.uk/News.htm Good news if one is lucky enough to find where to buy a digital radio for terrestrial reception. Except for satellite radio, terrestrial digital radio is a well kept secret. There is one digital AM radio station in the NYC area, WOR 710 KHZ, and no available receiver. I get a blank stare when I ask the so-called technical expert retail guy if their store sells digital AM radios. Maybe in the future there will be an after market auto radio capable of digital AM/FM reception and short wave DRM digital reception. |
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