Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB
and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 24/02/15 12:47, gareth wrote:
What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Technical developments of new encoding techniques that reduce required bandwidth, just as SSB improved over AM. You can get CODEC2 down to way less than an SSB signal quite easily. Technical developments of new encoding techniques that decrease the S/N margin needed for successful communications. Ability to send voice and data at the same time, over the same channel. Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Undoubtedly some are introducing digital technologies in an attempt to increase market share (hence them not all being compatible with each other), but there are many other reasons. A lot of the next generation HF rigs will have some kind of SDR onboard anyway (even if they have nice butons and knobs to use that we are all used to) Not everyone is going to want to get their hands dirty and code their own transceiver, or even hook up PA's PTT Changeover relays, preamps etc, so it's not as if the big manufacturers are going to be wiped out by SDR. There will still be a market for "black boxes" 73s Iain |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Iain Young, G7III" wrote in message
... On 24/02/15 12:47, gareth wrote: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Technical developments of new encoding techniques that reduce required bandwidth, just as SSB improved over AM. You can get CODEC2 down to way less than an SSB signal quite easily. Those who subscribe to these digital voice apparatuses lack a single clue about any underlying technical development |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Feb 2015 16:57:04 +0000, gareth wrote:
Those who subscribe to these digital voice apparatuses lack a single clue about any underlying technical development I've had this dream before. Oh wait a minute, that was about Single Side Band :-) Charlie. -- Hello Wisconsin! |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 24/02/2015 16:57, gareth wrote:
"Iain Young, G7III" wrote in message ... On 24/02/15 12:47, gareth wrote: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Technical developments of new encoding techniques that reduce required bandwidth, just as SSB improved over AM. You can get CODEC2 down to way less than an SSB signal quite easily. Those who subscribe to these digital voice apparatuses lack a single clue about any underlying technical development Sweeping statement. I have used digital voice and I have built my own kit (non-ham but basically the same as a digital voice front end) and wrote my own codecs (both fractal lossy and various lossless codecs). If you have trouble sleeping at night I am sure I can dig out my dissertation and forward it. The technology is dated (I built my first one using thick-film technology - that dates it a little) but the underlying work is still valid. Andy |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"gareth" wrote in news:mchrrq$n83$1@dont-
email.me: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Technical investigations for those with the requisite skill set. Isn't that what you're always banging on about, OM? Inane babble (i.e. 95% of all QSOs) is till inane babble regardless of whether it is transported by voice or Morse code. |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 24/02/2015 12:47, gareth wrote:
What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Bandwidth reduction for one. If you can encode and compress speech sufficiently then you can use less bandwidth in transmission. Clarity. With duplex transmission it is possible to transmit clear speech over a noisy channel assuming you use an error correcting and retransmission protocol, self correcting codes techniques etc. Band sharing. Multiple users can transmit on the same band assuming adequate time-slicing and collision detection and traffic handling. or just for the fun of doing it. Andy |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"AndyW" wrote in message
... On 24/02/2015 12:47, gareth wrote: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Bandwidth reduction for one. If you can encode and compress speech sufficiently then you can use less bandwidth in transmission. That's the bit I have trouble getting my head around. Back in the 1970s and 1980s digital transmissions used a much greater bandwidth than their analogue equivalents. Sampling at 2.2 x max frequency x number of bits plus housekeeping bits etc. etc. A UK standard 625 line PAL video transmission would have used a bandwidth of over 400MHz! Times have changed and left me behind, but I've still got me beer so who cares? -- ;-) .. 73 de Frank Turner-Smith G3VKI - mine's a pint. .. http://turner-smith.co.uk |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2/24/2015 11:32 AM, FranK Turner-Smith G3VKI wrote:
"AndyW" wrote in message ... On 24/02/2015 12:47, gareth wrote: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Bandwidth reduction for one. If you can encode and compress speech sufficiently then you can use less bandwidth in transmission. That's the bit I have trouble getting my head around. Back in the 1970s and 1980s digital transmissions used a much greater bandwidth than their analogue equivalents. Sampling at 2.2 x max frequency x number of bits plus housekeeping bits etc. etc. A UK standard 625 line PAL video transmission would have used a bandwidth of over 400MHz! Times have changed and left me behind, but I've still got me beer so who cares? But you forget compression. For instance, unless there is a scene change, the vast majority of a television picture does not change from frame to frame. Even if the camera moves, the picture shifts but doesn't change all that much. Why waste all of that bandwidth resending information the receiver already has? And voice isn't continuous; it has lots of pauses. Some are very noticeable, while others are so short we don't consciously hear them, but they are there. And once you've compressed everything you can out of the original signal, you can do bit compression, similar to zipping a file for sending. There are lots of ways to compress a signal before sending it digitally. About the only one which can't be compressed is pure white noise - which, of course, is only a concept (nothing is "pure"). -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote in message
... On 2/24/2015 11:32 AM, FranK Turner-Smith G3VKI wrote: "AndyW" wrote in message ... On 24/02/2015 12:47, gareth wrote: What is the point of digital voice when there are already AM, SSB and FM for those who want to appear indistinguishable from CBers? Perhaps it is cynicism from the manufacturers who introduce such things as they see their traditional highly-priced corner of the market being wiped away by SDR technologies? Bandwidth reduction for one. If you can encode and compress speech sufficiently then you can use less bandwidth in transmission. That's the bit I have trouble getting my head around. Back in the 1970s and 1980s digital transmissions used a much greater bandwidth than their analogue equivalents. Sampling at 2.2 x max frequency x number of bits plus housekeeping bits etc. etc. A UK standard 625 line PAL video transmission would have used a bandwidth of over 400MHz! Times have changed and left me behind, but I've still got me beer so who cares? But you forget compression. For instance, unless there is a scene change, the vast majority of a television picture does not change from frame to frame. Even if the camera moves, the picture shifts but doesn't change all that much. Why waste all of that bandwidth resending information the receiver already has? And voice isn't continuous; it has lots of pauses. Some are very noticeable, while others are so short we don't consciously hear them, but they are there. And once you've compressed everything you can out of the original signal, you can do bit compression, similar to zipping a file for sending. There are lots of ways to compress a signal before sending it digitally. About the only one which can't be compressed is pure white noise - which, of course, is only a concept (nothing is "pure"). Thanks, Jerry, you've explained a lot to me, and in a manner that an old fart like me can understand. I appreciate that, and feel I owe you a pint, (not a compressed 1cc one). -- ;-) .. 73 de Frank Turner-Smith G3VKI - mine's a pint. .. http://turner-smith.co.uk |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|