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![]() "Sidchase3" wrote in message ... Has anybody built or bought a DRM capable receiver? I printed out a schedule of broadcastng times from the DRM website. It appears that there are test transmissions going on from participating broadcasters a good part of the day. One station transmits for an hour or two and then passes off to another. Has anyone heard these broadcasts? How was the clarity? As I mentioned in Future of shortwave, I think there is tremendous potential for digital shortwave particularly concerning the transmission of text. The ability to interface these receivers with a computer (PC, laptop, palm) coupled with the relatively high coverage to cost ratio would enable a greater variety of thought (political, social) from marginalized groups to the reach the public. Digital text transmissions are done all the time right now. Hams do it, the military does it, utility stations do it. I suppose, if broadcasters wanted to do it, they would. There was some thought given to using the top 2 mhz(106 -108}of the US FM broadcast band for a broadcast newspaper fax service. I have a 1947 magazine article showing a prototype newspaper by radio fax service. It never caught on. Morse code is already the simplest, lowest cost broadcast text option. I can't see much advantage for broadcast text over text over the internet. After all, internet text is available when the user wants it, and not when the broadcaster wants to transmit it. As far as the FCC banning domestic broadcasts, the law could be challenged in court--I admit I don't know what the cost would be. But more importantly, I think the ban needs to be challenged in the court of public of opinion. The FCC seems to have little interest in regulating speech on the standard broadcasts, and none on SW. They certainly don't try to enforce any distinctions between foriegn and domestic programming on SW. The FCC does regulate frequency allocations and antenna patterns. But, for practical purposes, when a station transmits to Mexico from Maine or to Canada from Florida, they're also transmitting to the US. I suppose one measure of gaugeing the interest the FCC has in controlling what happens on shortwave radio is the low number of enforcement actions they take against pirate broadcasters. They don't seem to much care. Given the ridiculous situation today in which businesses can own multiple stations in one locality and enormous corporations control all the programming for those stations the FCC's rationale for the ban falls flat on its face. Ironically, domestic shortwave would represent the kind of programming diversity that the FCC claims it wants to promote. -Bill The ban isn't really enforced anymore. Several SW broadcasters sell time for just about any kind of programming. Frank Dresser |
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