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The Problem With Hybrid Digital
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Rfburns" wrote in message ... On Sep 24, 9:52 am, "David Eduardo" wrote: "Rfburns" wrote in message ... Who's building them into receivers now? Coby? Give me a break. Sony? They can't sell what they’ve already made and have a history of making products with technology nobody wants. Who Eduardo? Why doesn't the rest of the world know this? If this were true your buddy Bob "Booble" Struble would be shouting it from the housetops. Ibiquity likes to make "forward looking" announcements and exagerates anything that might be remotely positive about hybrid digital. Who's making low power HD radio receivers? Samsung is the biggest name that I saw. Of course, the largest consumer electronics company in the world is meaningless to you. So when is this radio going to show up? What chips will they use and how many kilowatts will I need? Does Struble know about this and have you informed him? He needs to know so that he can make the appropriate exaggerated announcements. Please tell me so when it doesn't happen I can inform you of how uniformed you really are. The Samsung, which apparently will also be available for OEM branded third party units, was on display in Austin at the NAB at the iBiquity booth among quite a few units, all new, and which included an MP3 player prototype built with the new Samsung chip. It was not a "hollow sample" but actually worked. To bad for your story that there is nothing on the Samsung web site about an HD - IBOC chip for either AM or FM. I guess you don't know what you are looking at. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
The Problem With Hybrid Digital
On Sep 24, 12:34 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
The Samsung, which apparently will also be available for OEM branded third party units, was on display in Austin at the NAB at the iBiquity booth among quite a few units, all new, and which included an MP3 player prototype built with the new Samsung chip. It was not a "hollow sample" but actually worked. Apparently available? What does that mean? And it actually worked? Wow. You sound like you are just as surprised as the rest of the us. Did you really hear it? Was there a three phase power source connected to it? Give it up Eduardo. It's over. |
The Problem With Hybrid Digital
On Sep 25, 11:24 am, Rfburns wrote:
On Sep 24, 12:34 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: The Samsung, which apparently will also be available for OEM branded third party units, was on display in Austin at the NAB at the iBiquity booth among quite a few units, all new, and which included an MP3 player prototype built with the new Samsung chip. It was not a "hollow sample" but actually worked. Apparently available? What does that mean? And it actually worked? Wow. You sound like you are just as surprised as the rest of the us. Did you really hear it? Was there a three phase power source connected to it? Give it up Eduardo. It's over. By the way Eduardo where is the "SiPort Single-Solution HD Radio Chip Certified by Ibiquity"? I've been looking for it as well as the "Strong Momentum in New HD Audio HD Channels". That's the problem with ****-ups like you and your detached buddies like Bob "The Booble" Struble. You read too many buzz word type publications and miss the whole point. Can I suggest that you give your overworked brain a rest and start looking at the classified ads in your local newspaper for a new job? |
The Problem With Hybrid Digital
On Sep 24, 9:52*am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Rfburns" wrote in message ... Who's building them into receivers now? *Coby? Give me a break. *Sony? They can't sell what they’ve already made and have a history of making products with technology nobody wants. *Who Eduardo? *Why doesn't the rest of the world know this? *If this were true your buddy Bob "Booble" Struble would be shouting it from the housetops. *Ibiquity likes to make "forward looking" announcements and exagerates anything that might be remotely positive about hybrid digital. *Who's making low power HD radio receivers? Samsung is the biggest name that I saw. Of course, the largest consumer electronics company in the world is meaningless to you. "HD Radio" "Until now, portable HD Radio receivers have been unavailable because the chipsets needed by this technology required too much power to be practical for a battery-operated device. However, in January 2008 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas iBiquity unveiled a prototype of a new iPod-sized portable receiver. It is based on a new chipset developed by Samsung. Although portable, it is still a relatively power-hungry device (it will run on an average set of alkaline batteries in about two hours, according to an iBiquity engineer). But Samsung engineers at CES say a second-generation chipset due in 2009 will be about 40 percent more power efficient and then a third-generation chipset due about a year later will use even less energy." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_Radio Samsung's HD chipset has only 2 hours of batery life - LOL! Of course, no announcement about this vaporwear chipset in any HD Radio products. |
The Problem With Hybrid Digital
On Sep 25, 11:38�am, Rfburns wrote:
On Sep 25, 11:24 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 24, 12:34 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: The Samsung, which apparently will also be available for OEM branded third party units, was on display in Austin at the NAB at the iBiquity booth among quite a few units, all new, and which included an MP3 player prototype built with the new Samsung chip. It was not a "hollow sample" but actually worked. Apparently available? �What does that mean? �And it actually worked? Wow. �You sound like you are just as surprised as the rest of the us. Did you really hear it? �Was there a three phase power source connected to it? Give it up Eduardo. �It's over. By the way Eduardo where is the "SiPort Single-Solution HD Radio Chip Certified by Ibiquity"? �I've been looking for it as well as the "Strong Momentum in New HD Audio HD Channels". That's the problem with ****-ups like you and your detached buddies like Bob "The Booble" Struble. �You read too many buzz word type publications and miss the whole point. Can I suggest that you give your overworked brain a rest and start looking at the classified ads in your local newspaper for a new job? SiPort's HD chipset is obviously az bust - maybe they figured out that it takes a car battery to run an IBOC computer, and that there is zero consumer demand for HD Radio. |
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