View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old January 23rd 12, 08:59 PM posted to ba.broadcast,alt.radio.digital,rec.radio.shortwave
FarsWatch4 FarsWatch4 is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jan 2012
Posts: 28
Default Fox News 2012: HD Radio one of "The Biggest CES Flops of All Time" LMFAO!!!!!!!!!


"D. Peter Maus" wrote in message
...
On 1/23/12 13:26 , FarsWatch4 wrote:
"D. Peter wrote in message
...
On 1/20/12 15:22 , FarsWatch4 wrote:
What's also not being addressed, is that stations are also

processing
the dynamics on the HD streams.

It's not being addressed because it's not true.

Even yet another case where you're denying a simple truth.

Stations ARE
processing their HD streams. Sometimes as heavily as their
baseband streams.


And many are not processing them at all.



Not nearly as many as your statement would imply.


(And nowhere near the statement that they process them just like their
broadcast signals.)

If you have some authoritative statistics to back up your claim, let me
know!

But the truth is, that they are not processing it just like they

do on the
broadcast band.


Not with the same hardware. But in much the same way.


Incorrect.

There is seperate processing. SOme stations don't use
virtually any processing at all on their HD streams.

Most, however, do.


I would say that MOST do not. (As someone currently working in
the industry.)


And you would be wrong. (As someone currently working in the
industry.)


You are a VO guy....Whereas I run numerous stations.

So, manglement calls for more processing on the HD Streams.

Yes, it does happen. It happens quite a lot, actually.



This is a vast generalization. No, it doesn't happen "quite a
lot".



Every station I (as someone currently working in the industry)
work with, running HD, processes their HD audio.


Most of the stations I work with started with no processing but a limiter.
The Engineers I deal with are trying to maintain a clean sound....so, no,
management is not calling for more processing.

Quite heavily, and
often to the same level as the baseband audio.



Still not true...no matter how often you say it,.