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				December 15th 04, 09:16 PM
			
			
			
	
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			In message , Mike Terry 
 writes Julia Day
 Tuesday December 14, 2004
 The Guardian
 
 The BBC has asked the government to wait another three years before deciding
 when to force listeners to convert to digital radio.
 
 Although digital radio is proving a success, the UK is not yet ready to
 switch over, the BBC said yesterday, as it submitted its vision for the
 sector to the government.
 
 The report said setting a switchover date now would be "undesirable", and
 would unsettle the radio market and alarm consumers.
 
 "Despite our commitment to digital radio as the replacement technology for
 analogue radio, we contend that conditions, namely accessibility,
 affordability and take-up, are not yet in place for switchover," the
 corporation said.
 
 It suggested a joint industry scheme over the next three years to plot the
 migration of the entire UK market to digital.
 
 The BBC believes switchover should not take place until digital radio
 services match those of analogue and plans are in place to ensure no
 organisation is left behind. It also wants the government to support
 manufacturers of digital.
 
 The corporation has already hatched a plan to allocate and manage the radio
 spectrum, a strategy it believes will "deliver enhancements to all tiers of
 digital radio provision".
 
 It wants five blocks of the so-called band III spectrum to be shared out
 across the entire industry to allow all BBC and commercial services to move
 over to digital.
 Details of the report will be shared with Ofcom and the government. It
 reiterates the corporation's belief that digital radio is a "robust
 broadcast medium capable of cheap, mass production and integration into a
 variety of devices".
 
 The analogue television signal will be switched off between 2008 and 2012.
 The government will announce the timetable and start preparing viewers next
 year.
 
 The UK has the world's most developed digital TV market, with more than 50%
 of 24.5m households receiving a signal through BSkyB, the BBC-backed
 Freeview or cable. In contrast, only 4% of households own a digital radio
 set.
 
 However, the UK has between 100m and 150m analogue radios, and digital
 radios sets cost at least £50. Listeners would have to invest more than £1bn
 to reach the
 current level of BSkyB's household penetration alone.
 
 http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/new...373379,00.html
 
 
 
 
When everything is digital, will they transmit the 'pips' early so we 
get them on time? At the moment, digital pips are late. 
Ian. 
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