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![]() "Brenda Ann Dyer" wrote in message ... Begging your pardon, Eduardo.. but you're full of yourself and of something else that decorum doesn't allow me to mention. I don't live in the middle of cities, and most places I HAVE lived, the so called "city contour" doesn't reach where I live.. and some of those places have even been within city limits. IBOC DOES INTERFERE WITH LISTENED TO SIGNALS. Not everyone lives in your perfect radio world. And the FCC, Ibiquity, and station engineers that run stations with IBOC shouldn't be arbitrarily deciding that I or anyone else is not important. It's a very good way to get a portion of their anatomy handed to them financially. The FCC in the HD review mad a reasond decision that the small amount of interference to secondary signals was overwhelmed by the need to give radio some form of digital capability. The loss of fringe signal reception was deemed to be a similar situation to the decison to break down the 1-A clear channels back in the 70's, thereby reducing the service areas of the (few) 1-A's in the US as there was evidence that their night skywave reception was on the wane and the public would benefit from more stations. In the present situation, the FCC considered the stability of the broadcast industry in not creating a new band for digital, and decided that some interference was acceptable in exchange for an in-band system that created a digital broadcast capability. There are now several more countires adopting HD, starting with Brazil and several in Asia. Mexico has stations on already, although the system is deemed "experimental." |
#2
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![]() David Eduardo wrote: "Brenda Ann Dyer" wrote in message ... Begging your pardon, Eduardo.. but you're full of yourself and of something else that decorum doesn't allow me to mention. I don't live in the middle of cities, and most places I HAVE lived, the so called "city contour" doesn't reach where I live.. and some of those places have even been within city limits. IBOC DOES INTERFERE WITH LISTENED TO SIGNALS. Not everyone lives in your perfect radio world. And the FCC, Ibiquity, and station engineers that run stations with IBOC shouldn't be arbitrarily deciding that I or anyone else is not important. It's a very good way to get a portion of their anatomy handed to them financially. The FCC in the HD review mad a reasond decision that the small amount of interference to secondary signals was overwhelmed by the need to give radio some form of digital capability. The loss of fringe signal reception was deemed to be a similar situation to the decison to break down the 1-A clear channels back in the 70's, thereby reducing the service areas of the (few) 1-A's in the US as there was evidence that their night skywave reception was on the wane and the public would benefit from more stations. In the present situation, the FCC considered the stability of the broadcast industry in not creating a new band for digital, and decided that some interference was acceptable in exchange for an in-band system that created a digital broadcast capability. There are now several more countires adopting HD, starting with Brazil and several in Asia. Mexico has stations on already, although the system is deemed "experimental." Yeah, it's "experimental" QRM. Take your IBOC and put it where the sun don't shine, boy. dxAce Michigan USA |
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