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Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation
What with this and IBOC whats the use"
Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation October 13th, 2007 - 10:51 UTC by Andy On 22 October, 190 nations will gather in Geneva for the quadrennial World Radiocommunication Conference, which allocates global radio frequency spectrum. Richard Russell, the US ambassador to the conference, describes it as the Spectrum Olympics. It's already looking as if shortwave broadcasters will lose the battle with military users over spectrum used for high-frequency communications in the 4 to 10 MHz bands, Russell said. The broadcasters want to use this band to replace their analogue broadcasts DRM services. But the US Navy wants to use the HF bands - underutilized since the demise of Morse code - to support the broadcast of data over new IP-based services at far less cost than sending data by satellite. Russell said that except for the European Union, countries are heading into the WRC aligned with the US position to not allow an expansion of shortwave brWhat with this and IBOC Whats the Pointoadcasting in the HF band. Read the full story at Government Executive Posted in For Consumers, For Media Professionals, |
Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation
On Oct 14, 3:45 am, "australia.radio.broadcast.moderated -"
wrote: What with this and IBOC whats the use" Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation October 13th, 2007 - 10:51 UTC by Andy On 22 October, 190 nations will gather in Geneva for the quadrennial World Radiocommunication Conference, which allocates global radio frequency spectrum. Richard Russell, the US ambassador to the conference, describes it as the Spectrum Olympics. It's already looking as if shortwave broadcasters will lose the battle with military users over spectrum used for high-frequency communications in the 4 to 10 MHz bands, Russell said. The broadcasters want to use this band to replace their analogue broadcasts DRM services. But the US Navy wants to use the HF bands - underutilized since the demise of Morse code - to support the broadcast of data over new IP-based services at far less cost than sending data by satellite. Russell said that except for the European Union, countries are heading into the WRC aligned with the US position to not allow an expansion of shortwave brWhat with this and IBOC Whats the Pointoadcasting in the HF band. Read the full story at Government Executive Posted in For Consumers, For Media Professionals, This could introduce a golden age of utility listening. |
Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation
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Steve wrote: On Oct 14, 3:45 am, "australia.radio.broadcast.moderated -" wrote: What with this and IBOC whats the use" Broadcasters may lose battle to expand 4-10 MHz allocation October 13th, 2007 - 10:51 UTC by Andy On 22 October, 190 nations will gather in Geneva for the quadrennial World Radiocommunication Conference, which allocates global radio frequency spectrum. Richard Russell, the US ambassador to the conference, describes it as the Spectrum Olympics. It's already looking as if shortwave broadcasters will lose the battle with military users over spectrum used for high-frequency communications in the 4 to 10 MHz bands, Russell said. The broadcasters want to use this band to replace their analogue broadcasts DRM services. But the US Navy wants to use the HF bands - underutilized since the demise of Morse code - to support the broadcast of data over new IP-based services at far less cost than sending data by satellite. Russell said that except for the European Union, countries are heading into the WRC aligned with the US position to not allow an expansion of shortwave brWhat with this and IBOC Whats the Pointoadcasting in the HF band. Read the full story at Government Executive Posted in For Consumers, For Media Professionals, This could introduce a golden age of utility listening. What? It is likely that it will be all encrypted. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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