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#1
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In article ,
Bart Bailey wrote: Saw a fairly good blowout price on a tabletop Accurion, had only recently heard of them, seems fairly decent quality, good fit-'n-finish, made in China. AMBCB was somewhat of a disappointment as there are only two stations I could get here in SoCal with the inferior low-gain supplied indoor loop, KNX 1070 and KOGO 600 and they both only showed their call sign and no program info, KNX did say it was in Los Angeles. The FMBCB on the other hand was a pleasant surprise with many stations offering sub channels and the local Public Broadcasting station, KPBS 89.5, offering two. I know there's been lots of talk about the bandwidth hogging aspect of HD-AMBCB, maybe that could be dropped, but the digitally encoded sub-channels of FMBCB don't seem to have any more negative effect than the long standing presence of SCA services, which aren't even noticed when tuning. I don't regret having a nice sounding tabletop that I can control via an IR remote, even if all HD goes away. The more sub channels offered the lower the bit rate for any one channel. The low bit rate may work for voice but not music. I don't even like it for voice myself. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#2
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On Mar 8, 7:33*pm, Telamon
wrote: In article , *Bart Bailey wrote: Saw a fairly good blowout price on a tabletop Accurion, had only recently heard of them, seems fairly decent quality, good fit-'n-finish, made in China. AMBCB was somewhat of a disappointment as there are only two stations I could get here in SoCal with the inferior low-gain supplied indoor loop, KNX 1070 and KOGO 600 and they both only showed their call sign and no program info, KNX did say it was in Los Angeles. *The FMBCB on the other hand was a pleasant surprise with many stations offering sub channels and the local Public Broadcasting station, KPBS 89.5, offering two. I know there's been lots of talk about the bandwidth *hogging aspect of HD-AMBCB, maybe that could be dropped, but the digitally encoded sub-channels of FMBCB don't seem to have any more negative effect than the long standing presence of SCA services, which aren't even noticed when tuning. I don't regret having a nice sounding tabletop that I can control via an IR remote, even if all HD goes away. The more sub channels offered the lower the bit rate for any one channel. The low bit rate may work for voice but not music. I don't even like it for voice myself. -- Telamon Ventura, California Radio is dead. Let the Liberal Fascists inherit the medium. The future is untouchable by Socialist Government control. Internet Streaming of digital 5.1 surround sound. |
#3
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#4
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#5
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On Mar 8, 7:20*pm, Telamon
wrote: In article , wrote: On Mar 8, 7:33*pm, Telamon wrote: In article , *Bart Bailey wrote: Saw a fairly good blowout price on a tabletop Accurion, had only recently heard of them, seems fairly decent quality, good fit-'n-finish, made in China. AMBCB was somewhat of a disappointment as there are only two stations I could get here in SoCal with the inferior low-gain supplied indoor loop, KNX 1070 and KOGO 600 and they both only showed their call sign and no program info, KNX did say it was in Los Angeles. *The FMBCB on the other hand was a pleasant surprise with many stations offering sub channels and the local Public Broadcasting station, KPBS 89.5, offering two. I know there's been lots of talk about the bandwidth *hogging aspect of HD-AMBCB, maybe that could be dropped, but the digitally encoded sub-channels of FMBCB don't seem to have any more negative effect than the long standing presence of SCA services, which aren't even noticed when tuning. I don't regret having a nice sounding tabletop that I can control via an IR remote, even if all HD goes away. The more sub channels offered the lower the bit rate for any one channel. The low bit rate may work for voice but not music. I don't even like it for voice myself. Radio is dead. *Let the Liberal Fascists inherit the medium. *The future is untouchable by Socialist Government control. *Internet Streaming of digital 5.1 surround sound. I'm not going to let them have it. -- Telamon Ventura, California They'l have to pry my old Analog AM&FM Radio out of my cold dead hands. - ya hear that ~ RHF |
#6
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In article ,
Bart Bailey wrote: In . net posted on Sun, 08 Mar 2009 17:33:17 -0700, Telamon wrote: Begin In article , Bart Bailey wrote: Saw a fairly good blowout price on a tabletop Accurion, had only recently heard of them, seems fairly decent quality, good fit-'n-finish, made in China. AMBCB was somewhat of a disappointment as there are only two stations I could get here in SoCal with the inferior low-gain supplied indoor loop, KNX 1070 and KOGO 600 and they both only showed their call sign and no program info, KNX did say it was in Los Angeles. The FMBCB on the other hand was a pleasant surprise with many stations offering sub channels and the local Public Broadcasting station, KPBS 89.5, offering two. I know there's been lots of talk about the bandwidth hogging aspect of HD-AMBCB, maybe that could be dropped, but the digitally encoded sub-channels of FMBCB don't seem to have any more negative effect than the long standing presence of SCA services, which aren't even noticed when tuning. I don't regret having a nice sounding tabletop that I can control via an IR remote, even if all HD goes away. The more sub channels offered the lower the bit rate for any one channel. The low bit rate may work for voice but not music. I don't even like it for voice myself. Our local KPBS 89.5 has a total content of four services and I don't find their digital programming unpleasantly restricted. They have their primary analog audio plus two digital sub channels, one classical and the other a streaming feed of Groove Salad, neither of which have any noticeable audio deficiencies, and then there's the SCA (radio reading service) which I remember to be slightly inferior analog audio when music would play, but it was mostly talk. I no longer have an SCA decoder nor does the new Accurian. I've listened to recordings and HD has artifacts I don't like to listen to so you are not going to convince me it's OK because it isn't. The more sub-channels, the lower the bit rate on any one channel, and the higher the compression. The higher rates of compression have more artifacts. That's just the way it is with the numbers that support my listening criteria. Same goes for that DRM nonsense. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#7
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On Mar 11, 1:47�am, Bart Bailey wrote:
In posted on Tue, 10 Mar 2009 17:46:03 -0700, Telamon wrote: Begin � In article , Bart Bailey wrote: In . net posted on Sun, 08 Mar 2009 17:33:17 -0700, Telamon wrote: Begin � In article , Bart Bailey wrote: Saw a fairly good blowout price on a tabletop Accurion, had only recently heard of them, seems fairly decent quality, good fit-'n-finish, made in China. AMBCB was somewhat of a disappointment as there are only two stations I could get here in SoCal with the inferior low-gain supplied indoor loop, KNX 1070 and KOGO 600 and they both only showed their call sign and no program info, KNX did say it was in Los Angeles. �The FMBCB on the other hand was a pleasant surprise with many stations offering sub channels and the local Public Broadcasting station, KPBS 89.5, offering two. I know there's been lots of talk about the bandwidth �hogging aspect of HD-AMBCB, maybe that could be dropped, but the digitally encoded sub-channels of FMBCB don't seem to have any more negative effect than the long standing presence of SCA services, which aren't even noticed when tuning. I don't regret having a nice sounding tabletop that I can control via an IR remote, even if all HD goes away. The more sub channels offered the lower the bit rate for any one channel. The low bit rate may work for voice but not music. I don't even like it for voice myself. Our local KPBS 89.5 has a total content of four services and I don't find their digital programming unpleasantly restricted. They have their primary analog audio plus two digital sub channels, one classical and the other a streaming feed of Groove Salad, neither of which have any noticeable audio deficiencies, and then there's the SCA (radio reading service) which I remember to be slightly inferior analog audio when music would play, but it was mostly talk. I no longer have an SCA decoder nor does the new Accurian. I've listened to recordings and HD has artifacts I don't like to listen to so you are not going to convince me it's OK because it isn't. The more sub-channels, the lower the bit rate on any one channel, and the higher the compression. The higher rates of compression have more artifacts. That's just the way it is with the numbers that support my listening criteria. Same goes for that DRM nonsense. I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything, just stating that it sounds OK to me, even a local station with four components multiplexed into their carrier.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "HD Radio spinners claim a breakthrough year: Pulling a fast one" "According to a press release from the Alliance 330,000 HD receivers were sold last year. This is a 725 per cent increase from the 40,000 sets purchased a year earlier and therefore 2007 was a 'breakthrough year' for the technology. In 2008 they will sell a million of the things." http://tinyurl.com/4zgkaw LOL! |
#8
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On Mar 12, 4:35�pm, Bart Bailey wrote:
In posted on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 12:55:41 -0700 (PDT), PocketRadio wrote: Begin � http://tinyurl,con/4zgkaw Frankly I don't care if any are sold, I'm not in the business. I only commented that I like certain aspects of the radio I bought, namely the FM adaptation and indicated that the AMBCB version could go away. I fail to see your obsession against the mode, other than some personality imbalance. You have yet to make a valid argument, but only whimper from your nym**** google-group handle. I am however amazed at the speed at which your credibility has eroded, plus being an AOLoser doesn't help either. **** yourself in the ass, IBOC-shill. |
#9
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![]() "HD Radio spinners claim a breakthrough year: Pulling a fast one" Why such hatred for new technology? Should we all go back to spark gap morse code on the broadcast bands? Why are you stuck to an almost 100 year old technology? Granted, radio sucks.. but it is the homogenized blah content that is the core of that suckiness, not the technology. No originality, no uniqueness. What the h*ll happened to local content? Fix the bandwidth waste of satellite fed national feeds of non stop talking heads with nothing between their ears and short playlists of hits of the last 30 years of the 20th century and the technology will be worth it. Otherwise please don't act like an old wash woman with a wet pair of drawers on. If you don't like what you hear, set the power switch to off. |
#10
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In article ,
Steve Stone wrote: "HD Radio spinners claim a breakthrough year: Pulling a fast one" Why such hatred for new technology? I hate the way it sounds. I hate the way it trashes adjacent stations. I hate old technology that is misapplied. Should we all go back to spark gap morse code on the broadcast bands? Feel free. Why are you stuck to an almost 100 year old technology? It works. Granted, radio sucks.. but it is the homogenized blah content that is the core of that suckiness, not the technology. No it doesn't. You need to find another news group. No originality, no uniqueness. What the h*ll happened to local content? It's on the local stations fruit loop. Fix the bandwidth waste of satellite fed national feeds of non stop talking heads with nothing between their ears and short playlists of hits of the last 30 years of the 20th century and the technology will be worth it. That's not a solution for the broadcast bands. Otherwise please don't act like an old wash woman with a wet pair of drawers on. Stop projecting. If you don't like what you hear, set the power switch to off. If you don't like the topic of the news group then go post elsewhere. -- Telamon Ventura, California |