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#1
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COMMENTARY by Andy Sennitt, 27 May 2004
Radio Netherlands - Netherlands .... It's good news, though, that the private shortwave broadcasters in the US, as well as ... Nineteen years at the World Radio TV Handbook taught me that, in general ... http://www.rnw.nl/realradio/features/html/digital040527.html |
#2
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![]() "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... COMMENTARY by Andy Sennitt, 27 May 2004 Radio Netherlands - Netherlands ... It's good news, though, that the private shortwave broadcasters in the US, as well as ... Nineteen years at the World Radio TV Handbook taught me that, in general ... http://www.rnw.nl/realradio/features/html/digital040527.html DRM claims there are tests by US domestic broadcasters. It's called "The Voice of the NASB" They're listed here at the Oct. 23, 2003 press release: http://drm.org/newsevents/globpressreleas.htm But, it's not like any US private broadcaster is using DRM on his own transmitter. It looks like it's more like they are mailing tapes to Jeff White, and those recordings get broadcast on a European Transmitter, beamed to Europe. http://drm.org/livebroadcast/globfieldtrial.htm Even worse, it looks like we aren't sharing the good stuff like the Alex Jones Show, The Jerimiah 33-3 Ministries guy, George W. Gentry, or any of the Gold Bugs and Medicine Shows. If Europeans get lucky, WRMI might share James Lloyd. Frank Dresser |
#3
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![]() "Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... Even worse, it looks like we aren't sharing the good stuff like the Alex Jones Show, The Jerimiah 33-3 Ministries guy, George W. Gentry, or any of the Gold Bugs and Medicine Shows. If Europeans get lucky, WRMI might share James Lloyd. Frank Dresser DRM and it's digital broadcasting mode children will never appear on shortwave. Mark it in your book. Analog will be here for a very long time to come, as any digital dependent mode requires a clear signal path for reception. When was the last time we heard a clear shortwave program or station that had ZERO fading, noise or propagation issues with it's signal? My guess is you can count them on one hand. A perfect example is how everyone has had to endure poor signal degradation from someone using a modern cellphone. 20% of the calls I get from people out in the field usually cut out or are partially garbled, and I am using a brand new Samsung and Nokia digital phone. Any loss of "data" between you and 'over there/wherever' on the other end of the cellphone line and your call is useless or interrupted. If it's this bad with local Verizon cell phone service in a major metro area (NJ/NY/Ct) then how bad will it be with a digital shortwave signal comming halfway around the world on a much lower frequency prone to atmospherics and other degradation...? Digital Shortwave???? Sounds alot like New Coke or the Yugo car or any one of another 'brilliant' consumer technology or product ideas that are now in the rubbish bin of history. |
#4
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Flander's Fartwhistle wrote:
DRM and it's digital broadcasting mode children will never appear on shortwave. Mark it in your book. Analog will be here for a very long time to come, as any digital dependent mode requires a clear signal path for reception. When was the last time we heard a clear shortwave program or station that had ZERO fading, noise or propagation issues with it's signal? My guess is you can count them on one hand. A perfect example is how everyone has had to endure poor signal degradation from someone using a modern cellphone. 20% of the calls I get from people out in the field usually cut out or are partially garbled, and I am using a brand new Samsung and Nokia digital phone. Any loss of "data" between you and 'over there/wherever' on the other end of the cellphone line and your call is useless or interrupted. If it's this bad with local Verizon cell phone service in a major metro area (NJ/NY/Ct) then how bad will it be with a digital shortwave signal comming halfway around the world on a much lower frequency prone to atmospherics and other degradation...? Digital Shortwave???? Sounds alot like New Coke or the Yugo car or any one of another 'brilliant' consumer technology or product ideas that are now in the rubbish bin of history. The success of DRM doesn't depend on perfect propagation conditions. If it did, the proponents of this technology wouldn't consider using it for ionospheric propagation. It's a matter of how degraded the conditions can be before the digital signal can not be decoded properly. DRM has considerable tolerance for poor propagation. The cell phone comparison is apples and oranges. They are two very different technologies and frequency ranges. If DRM fails to catch on, it will most likely be because people don't want to buy new receivers for international broadcasting when it appears to have an uncertain future at this time. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#5
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In article , starman
wrote: Flander's Fartwhistle wrote: DRM and it's digital broadcasting mode children will never appear on shortwave. Mark it in your book. Analog will be here for a very long time to come, as any digital dependent mode requires a clear signal path for reception. When was the last time we heard a clear shortwave program or station that had ZERO fading, noise or propagation issues with it's signal? My guess is you can count them on one hand. A perfect example is how everyone has had to endure poor signal degradation from someone using a modern cellphone. 20% of the calls I get from people out in the field usually cut out or are partially garbled, and I am using a brand new Samsung and Nokia digital phone. Any loss of "data" between you and 'over there/wherever' on the other end of the cellphone line and your call is useless or interrupted. If it's this bad with local Verizon cell phone service in a major metro area (NJ/NY/Ct) then how bad will it be with a digital shortwave signal comming halfway around the world on a much lower frequency prone to atmospherics and other degradation...? Digital Shortwave???? Sounds alot like New Coke or the Yugo car or any one of another 'brilliant' consumer technology or product ideas that are now in the rubbish bin of history. The success of DRM doesn't depend on perfect propagation conditions. If it did, the proponents of this technology wouldn't consider using it for ionospheric propagation. It's a matter of how degraded the conditions can be before the digital signal can not be decoded properly. DRM has considerable tolerance for poor propagation. The cell phone comparison is apples and oranges. They are two very different technologies and frequency ranges. If DRM fails to catch on, it will most likely be because people don't want to buy new receivers for international broadcasting when it appears to have an uncertain future at this time. The FEC in DRM is pretty weak. FEC in stable medium just to overcome the stable defects needs to be about 1/3 of the transmitted overhead. DRM does not even provide this much for a non stable path and so it is completely inadequate for HF propagation. DRM on SW is not unlike pounding screws into wood with a hammer instead of using a screw driver. The hammer will pound in the screws just like a nail but you will not derive the benefit of using the screw over the nail for greater fastening power by pounding it in with the hammer. The wheels came off this technology before it even got started. DRM - the claims amount to a Michael Bryant type of non reality. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#6
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Telamon wrote:
In article , starman wrote: Flander's Fartwhistle wrote: DRM and it's digital broadcasting mode children will never appear on shortwave. Mark it in your book. Analog will be here for a very long time to come, as any digital dependent mode requires a clear signal path for reception. When was the last time we heard a clear shortwave program or station that had ZERO fading, noise or propagation issues with it's signal? My guess is you can count them on one hand. A perfect example is how everyone has had to endure poor signal degradation from someone using a modern cellphone. 20% of the calls I get from people out in the field usually cut out or are partially garbled, and I am using a brand new Samsung and Nokia digital phone. Any loss of "data" between you and 'over there/wherever' on the other end of the cellphone line and your call is useless or interrupted. If it's this bad with local Verizon cell phone service in a major metro area (NJ/NY/Ct) then how bad will it be with a digital shortwave signal comming halfway around the world on a much lower frequency prone to atmospherics and other degradation...? Digital Shortwave???? Sounds alot like New Coke or the Yugo car or any one of another 'brilliant' consumer technology or product ideas that are now in the rubbish bin of history. The success of DRM doesn't depend on perfect propagation conditions. If it did, the proponents of this technology wouldn't consider using it for ionospheric propagation. It's a matter of how degraded the conditions can be before the digital signal can not be decoded properly. DRM has considerable tolerance for poor propagation. The cell phone comparison is apples and oranges. They are two very different technologies and frequency ranges. If DRM fails to catch on, it will most likely be because people don't want to buy new receivers for international broadcasting when it appears to have an uncertain future at this time. The FEC in DRM is pretty weak. FEC in stable medium just to overcome the stable defects needs to be about 1/3 of the transmitted overhead. DRM does not even provide this much for a non stable path and so it is completely inadequate for HF propagation. DRM on SW is not unlike pounding screws into wood with a hammer instead of using a screw driver. The hammer will pound in the screws just like a nail but you will not derive the benefit of using the screw over the nail for greater fastening power by pounding it in with the hammer. The wheels came off this technology before it even got started. DRM - the claims amount to a Michael Bryant type of non reality. I was with you until you went OT at the end. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#7
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yes, shortwave will have fading mostly, but how digital technology can
help sw to reach remote places? Will satellite radios be able to reach every corner of this planet? The price range and subscription services are still out of reach for most of the people around the world. What I feel that high-tech worlds will have all the new technolgies -- DRM and other DAB kind of thingie -- but alas, remote places will be always "remote" as digital divide goes on. raqueeb hassan congo (drc) |
#8
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In article , starman
wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , starman wrote: Flander's Fartwhistle wrote: DRM and it's digital broadcasting mode children will never appear on shortwave. Mark it in your book. Analog will be here for a very long time to come, as any digital dependent mode requires a clear signal path for reception. When was the last time we heard a clear shortwave program or station that had ZERO fading, noise or propagation issues with it's signal? My guess is you can count them on one hand. A perfect example is how everyone has had to endure poor signal degradation from someone using a modern cellphone. 20% of the calls I get from people out in the field usually cut out or are partially garbled, and I am using a brand new Samsung and Nokia digital phone. Any loss of "data" between you and 'over there/wherever' on the other end of the cellphone line and your call is useless or interrupted. If it's this bad with local Verizon cell phone service in a major metro area (NJ/NY/Ct) then how bad will it be with a digital shortwave signal comming halfway around the world on a much lower frequency prone to atmospherics and other degradation...? Digital Shortwave???? Sounds alot like New Coke or the Yugo car or any one of another 'brilliant' consumer technology or product ideas that are now in the rubbish bin of history. The success of DRM doesn't depend on perfect propagation conditions. If it did, the proponents of this technology wouldn't consider using it for ionospheric propagation. It's a matter of how degraded the conditions can be before the digital signal can not be decoded properly. DRM has considerable tolerance for poor propagation. The cell phone comparison is apples and oranges. They are two very different technologies and frequency ranges. If DRM fails to catch on, it will most likely be because people don't want to buy new receivers for international broadcasting when it appears to have an uncertain future at this time. The FEC in DRM is pretty weak. FEC in stable medium just to overcome the stable defects needs to be about 1/3 of the transmitted overhead. DRM does not even provide this much for a non stable path and so it is completely inadequate for HF propagation. DRM on SW is not unlike pounding screws into wood with a hammer instead of using a screw driver. The hammer will pound in the screws just like a nail but you will not derive the benefit of using the screw over the nail for greater fastening power by pounding it in with the hammer. The wheels came off this technology before it even got started. DRM - the claims amount to a Michael Bryant type of non reality. I was with you until you went OT at the end. That was a reference to not possible statements such as DRM will sound better using the same bandwidth even when some of that bandwidth will be used for other things. That and other BS statements to that effect. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#9
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I agree with Raqueeb.
The following article tells the of the continuing importance of radio in most of the world. http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4953281/ Many thanks to RadioIntel.com for headlining this article. Bill, K5BY SETexas |
#10
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![]() "starman" wrote: The success of DRM doesn't depend on perfect propagation conditions. If it did, the proponents of this technology wouldn't consider using it for ionospheric propagation. It's a matter of how degraded the conditions can be before the digital signal can not be decoded properly. DRM has considerable tolerance for poor propagation. I have to disagree. After trying the first "stand alone" DRM receiver for a week now (from MAYAH) - I must say that so far I haven't been able to listen to ANY broadcasts in DRM without many, many breaks. With the built in telescopic aerial hardly anything in DRM is receivable but with an outdoor longwire aerial I do get a few of the VERY strongest stations broadcasting in DRM, such as RN, RTL and DW. However, so far I haven't heard anything souding reasonable. It is impossible to follow a programme because when the signal fades out briefly the sound will become very distorted and then disappear for a few seconds or even several seconds - then the distorted audio appears again and then clean audio for a while till the next deep fade. As everyone knows - with AM you can easily follow a programme even though there is some fading. Either is the MAYAH DRM receiver very very poor - or DRM is only usuable when you have a local, stable signal with no fading. Best 73s, Stig Hartvig Nielsen, Denmark |
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