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Art Clemons wrote: Mike Terry wrote: Will dx become more interesting as the power blasters close down in favour of internet and satellite? Things could be getting exciting for dxers. I suggest that without the big name broadcasters to draw folks to broadcasting, there will be lesser listenership and less reason for dx stations to remain on the air. Broadcasting is expensive as all getout, especially for poor countries. The justification for reaching listeners outside said poor country is slowly fading away and with the internet, cd distribution and the like, the need to listen to shortwave for music and entertainment is slowly fading away too. I'ld love to see SW broadcasting remain, I'm not always near an internet connection and all too many of the SW broadcasters I used to regularly listen to, now have skimpy or no signals with me using better receivers than I even dreamed about when I first started listening years ago. I just don't see it continuing for long. The Internet being the end of short wave is an old refrain. I have not tried streaming news from the BBC web site lately but in the past it has been just terrible and I have a DSL connection. Audio and video was full of artifacts and slow. Audio from the BBC sounds much better over short wave than over the Internet. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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