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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article .net, "Stephen M.H. Lawrence" wrote: "Frank Dresser" wrote | AM IBOC has been around for a year or two, and it's still something of a | novelty. It doesn't seem to be taking off as quickly as AM Stereo, and | there aren't many receivers available, yet. I've read the "pro and con" editorials in Radio World and some of the other trade rags, but every single editorialist misses the following point: Sound quality is not the problem. PROGRAMMING is the problem. We probably shouldn't rely on anecdotal evidence, but everyone I know will put up with natural and manmade noise to hear their favorite shows. Come to think of it, there's no evidence that DRM or IBOC have anything close to a robust noise - fighting system. I imagine a good thunderstorm will cause dropped packets and receiver muting. Another problem is multiple layering of compression and expansion codec schemes. Has anyone listened to a (usually) decent - quality AM plant that is transmitting supercompressed talk show audio at a bandwidth of 5 KHZ with a low, low, low bitrate? Something along the lines of 8 to 16 KHz bitrate? That fact alone puts the lie to the digital pushers' rants about "Audio quality." snip DRM - Deception Radio Mondiale Another lie is the system is open and contains no proprietary intellectual property. It won't be any better under the best of circumstances where you will trade noise and interference for drop outs. DRM is a lame scheme. Digital radio and television are lame schemes, period. To get the same quality as analog, you have to have a much wider bandwidth in digital. Encoding schemes are ways of narrowing bandwidth required to broadcast, but they all have some trade-offs. I've not been impressed with digital satellite at all. Too much weather related dropout, and too much pixelization, especially during fast scene transitions.. |