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#1
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http://www.rwonline.com/ shows the cover of the current Radio World
magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. |
#2
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On Feb 22, 2:51�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
http://www.rwonline.com/shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article.. "Don''t be put off by high power drain" "I have just purchased my second Bush DAB radio (I left the first in a hotel room and never had it returned) I have also owned the Ferguson version which, I believe is the same but for the case and battery compartment (Ferg uses 3 AAs). Yes they do use a lot of power but this is understandable as the units use Digital to analogue converters which are very power hungrydevices (feel the heat coming off your Sky Box!). The trick is to use rechargable batteries (we should all do this anyway for environmental reasons) - I use mine in bed every night and frequently fall asleep with the unit on; using 2700 mAhr batteries I get about 2 nights sleep out of them - Just have two sets - one on charge and one on drain." http://tinyurl.com/2uxork "Nokia Music Internet Radio: Listen to the World Through Internet Radio" http://europe.nokia.com/A4668051 No matter what, digital to analogue converters are battery-hogs. No one, is going to be interested in HD chipsets with cell phone providers starting to provide access to Internet Radio. LOL! |
#3
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![]() "IBOCcrock" wrote in message ... On Feb 22, 2:51?pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. "Don''t be put off by high power drain" None of the receivers with these new chips is even shipping, you idiot. |
#4
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On Feb 22, 4:20�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"IBOCcrock" wrote in message ... On Feb 22, 2:51?pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/showsthe cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. "Don''t be put off by high power drain" None of the receivers with these new chips is even shipping, you idiot. No **** - they will still be battery-hogs. Did I state that I thought that they had shipped - can you say "obsfucation"? |
#5
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On Feb 22, 4:20�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"IBOCcrock" wrote in message ... On Feb 22, 2:51?pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/showsthe cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. "Don''t be put off by high power drain" None of the receivers with these new chips is even shipping, you idiot. The article was about DAB receivers, not HD Radio receivers, you idiot! |
#6
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In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/ shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. I don't have subscription but I did just subscribe. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#7
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In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/ shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. I looked at the SiPort web page and the company is just a shell company composed of management types. The news and events page just states "stay tuned." This has not changed since last spring when I looked them up. http://www.siport.com/news.htm I can only find two Radio World articles about them from last spring and one even older article about them here from 2005, which is a press release from the CEO. http://www.intelportfolio.com/CPS/CoProfile.aspx?co_id=962 The Samsung semiconductor web page does not have these part numbers. The prefix does not appear to be a part of their part numbering scheme. Try your luck here and let me know if you find anything. http://www.samsung.com/global/busine...ctsearch/param etricsearch/ProductSearch_ParametricSearch_List.html -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#8
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In article
, Telamon wrote: In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/ shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. I looked at the SiPort web page and the company is just a shell company composed of management types. The news and events page just states "stay tuned." This has not changed since last spring when I looked them up. http://www.siport.com/news.htm I can only find two Radio World articles about them from last spring and one even older article about them here from 2005, which is a press release from the CEO. http://www.intelportfolio.com/CPS/CoProfile.aspx?co_id=962 The Samsung semiconductor web page does not have these part numbers. The prefix does not appear to be a part of their part numbering scheme. Try your luck here and let me know if you find anything. http://www.samsung.com/global/busine...ctsearch/param etricsearch/ProductSearch_ParametricSearch_List.html Pardon me for replying to my own post but here is some information from TI. The following link is their concept HD radio, which could also be used for other digital radio formats such as DRM. The information here is kind of dated. TI produces entire lines of DSP/CPU chips that can be programed to do just just about anything you would want. What is significant to note here is that they have not developed a reference design, or have application notes, and have not developed any specific tools for this application. Since iBiquity owns this proprietary software scheme you would have to have a license for a copy on the EEPROM in the block diagram. http://focus.ti.com/docs/solution/fo...P=OTC-dsp_solu tions_newsletter&HQS=Other+NL+dmedianewsaug06contr ibhd#pr Note that the news release at the bottom is 2/6/2006. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#9
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David Eduardo wrote:
http://www.rwonline.com/ shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. That's 20 times too much power. That would drain a cellphone in a couple hours. |
#10
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IBOCcrock wrote:
On Feb 22, 2:51�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: http://www.rwonline.com/shows the cover of the current Radio World magazine, where the lead article is about the Samsung chip, built around a SHDR100A peripheral processor and the SDHR200A main processor and flash and RAM memory and which is currently available. The article discusses the power requirements and all kinds of other HD developments shown at CES, including the SiPort chip, which is also available to manufacturers now. Both consume between 120 and 180 mW of power. Both chips are intended for integrated devices. If you qualify for an online subscription, you can read the entire article. "Don''t be put off by high power drain" "I have just purchased my second Bush DAB radio (I left the first in a hotel room and never had it returned) I have also owned the Ferguson version which, I believe is the same but for the case and battery compartment (Ferg uses 3 AAs). Yes they do use a lot of power but this is understandable as the units use Digital to analogue converters which are very power hungrydevices (feel the heat coming off your Sky Box!). The trick is to use rechargable batteries (we should all do this anyway for environmental reasons) - I use mine in bed every night and frequently fall asleep with the unit on; using 2700 mAhr batteries I get about 2 nights sleep out of them - Just have two sets - one on charge and one on drain." http://tinyurl.com/2uxork "Nokia Music Internet Radio: Listen to the World Through Internet Radio" http://europe.nokia.com/A4668051 No matter what, digital to analogue converters are battery-hogs. No one, is going to be interested in HD chipsets with cell phone providers starting to provide access to Internet Radio. LOL! XM receivers have DACs and use less than 10 mA. |
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