On Jan 15, 2008 9:18 AM, The Other <sstubbs(a)shout.net> wrote:
Hello All,
What is HD radio? A local radio station is advertising they are the
first HD radio station in my listening area. Is HD supposed to mean
High Definition?
no, that's a clever rhetorical trick, meant to capitalize on the
success (?) of HDTV, which does, in fact, provide more dots.
Now this make sense to me. Rather than having a radio
broadcasted
recording go for "LOUD", the powers-that-be in radio broadcasting have
finally discovered that the radio audience actually prefers to hear
the subtlety in the music.
that's overly optimistic, and far from the mark.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_Radio
simply, it adds a few program streams to the broadcast by digitally
encoding and compressing (data-wise, not dynamically) them into the
unused bits of an AM/FM station's designated portion of spectrum.
this means that, instead of broadcasting one set of programs, a
station can broadcast two or three sets simultaneously.
it requires upgrades to the transmitters that cost major moolah, and
it requires a new receiver at home / in car / on person.
i'd be dumbfounded that the FCC went for a completely proprietary
system, if i weren't already so accustomed to consistently disagreeing
with their decisions. unlicensed spectrum, such as the ranges used
for wifi and garage door openers, is where it's at.
Took the powers-that-be long enough. Now if they
would just use the
same techniques for television commercials. I *hate* it when the
commercial is louder than the television program.
i don't - the stupidly excessive dynamic compression of commercials is
one of the indicators do-it-yourself PVRs (mythtv, sagetv, etc.) use
to flag and remove commercial breaks for me.
big business' ways shall be their own undoing. proceed as normally. :)
--
daneasley(a)gmail.com
http://burntpossum.com