![]() |
IBOC Crap News
David Frackelton Gleason, posing as Edtardo wrote: "Steve" wrote in message oups.com... David Eduardo wrote: Irrelevant twaddle deleted. You are so BUSTED!! What is "twaddle?" Baloney: pretentious or silly talk or writing. You know... what YOU do, oh shiller of IBOC/QRM dxAce Michigan USA |
IBOC Crap News
David Eduardo wrote: "Steve" wrote in message oups.com... David Eduardo wrote: Irrelevant twaddle deleted. You are so BUSTED!! What is "twaddle?" As BUSTED as you are, you shouldn't even concern yourself. |
IBOC Crap News
"Telamon" wrote in message ... .. The TV band is going to be auctioned off for new technologies and the FCC plans to bring in billions. Giving licenses for new "AM swaps" in Bemidji will not come anywhere close to that, so it will not happen. Further above you asked what frequencies would I use and the last paragraph I previously wrote answers that. I don't see why some of the old TV band could not be used for a new commercial digital radio band that normally would not propagate out of the local area. Antennas would be smaller like the current FM band. The FCC is not going to give up multi-billion dollar frequencies for a few dollars. They already have a plan and demand for the TV channels, and this is pretty much set in cement. The hybrid IBOC is temporary and the analog will portion will be done away with anyway so existing radios will be obsoleted. Probably not for a decade, if that. There is no sunset law on it going all digital... unlike HDTV. |
IBOC Crap News
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... . The TV band is going to be auctioned off for new technologies and the FCC plans to bring in billions. Giving licenses for new "AM swaps" in Bemidji will not come anywhere close to that, so it will not happen. Further above you asked what frequencies would I use and the last paragraph I previously wrote answers that. I don't see why some of the old TV band could not be used for a new commercial digital radio band that normally would not propagate out of the local area. Antennas would be smaller like the current FM band. The FCC is not going to give up multi-billion dollar frequencies for a few dollars. They already have a plan and demand for the TV channels, and this is pretty much set in cement. The hybrid IBOC is temporary and the analog will portion will be done away with anyway so existing radios will be obsoleted. Probably not for a decade, if that. There is no sunset law on it going all digital... unlike HDTV. None of this matters. You're BUSTED. |
IBOC Crap News
In article ,
Mike wrote: In article , Telamon wrote: WTF indeed. Read the thread. Did I write day time and night time was the same? Noooo. Wow you are an asshole. I know what the thread is about. I know the objections to IBOC. If you read what I actually wrote - not what you think I wrote - you would see that I was ACTUALLY AGREEING WITH YOU! I would rather see current AM programming go to FM rather than **** up AM with "digital"! Do you get it yet? "That's why I'd rather see it move to FM than to "digital AM". Yes, that's exactly it. Given a choice of ****ing up AM or moving to FM, I vote for the latter. You pompous, presumptuous ****. Have a good life, dip****. Same to you. Plonk -- Telamon Ventura, California |
IBOC Crap News
"David Eduardo" wrote in message . com... ::history lesson snipped:: Now that it is proposed to continue the local over distant usage AND going to a new mode requires that everyone buy new receivers why not change the band to a frequency range that does not favor distant propagation? And what frequencies would you use? And that would obsolete existing radios, which HD does not do. No it wouldn't; you've stated yourself that there's no movement to replace the analog streams with digital, but rather it's an addition to the current service. What is the point of making a mess of the current AM band? The status quo could be maintained by giving the current AMBCB holders of licenses first dibs on the new band. But, in the way the AM band is used today, it does not make as big a mess as everyone complains. I have seen several recent RW articles in which skywave is still defended as the reason why HD is not a good idea. These experts do not understand that, starting with the FCC in the 40's, skywave is no longer relevant. There are all kinds of solutions out there. Former TV analog band space could be used for radio or as a sub channel on digital over the air TV. The TV band is going to be auctioned off for new technologies and the FCC plans to bring in billions. Giving licenses for new "AM swaps" in Bemidji will not come anywhere close to that, so it will not happen. I'm still waiting on that one happening. There are still plenty of people out there who haven't bought their new digital TV yet, technological improvement or not. No Congressman wants to be seen as blowing off a big constituency like the elderly on a fixed income who can't afford the new sets; Congress will keep extending the deadline until enough old televisions have died off to make it practical. Aside from that, the way other prices have been rising lately I don't think that people will be putting a digital converter or a digital television at the top of their "to purchase" list anytime soon. --Mike L. |
IBOC Crap News
"Michael Lawson" wrote in message ... .. I'm still waiting on that one happening. There are still plenty of people out there who haven't bought their new digital TV yet, technological improvement or not. No Congressman wants to be seen as blowing off a big constituency like the elderly on a fixed income who can't afford the new sets; Congress will keep extending the deadline until enough old televisions have died off to make it practical. Aside from that, the way other prices have been rising lately I don't think that people will be putting a digital converter or a digital television at the top of their "to purchase" list anytime soon. They have developed a plan to provide digital cable converters to anyone for free. Makes old sets totally usable via downconversion of digital to analog. |
IBOC Crap News
"David Eduardo" wrote in message .com... "Michael Lawson" wrote in message ... . I'm still waiting on that one happening. There are still plenty of people out there who haven't bought their new digital TV yet, technological improvement or not. No Congressman wants to be seen as blowing off a big constituency like the elderly on a fixed income who can't afford the new sets; Congress will keep extending the deadline until enough old televisions have died off to make it practical. Aside from that, the way other prices have been rising lately I don't think that people will be putting a digital converter or a digital television at the top of their "to purchase" list anytime soon. They have developed a plan to provide digital cable converters to anyone for free. Makes old sets totally usable via downconversion of digital to analog. That'll be interesting, but they have to fund it and advertise it first. I can't see the big box stores being too thrilled about it, either, since it means that the people who might consider upgrading their television now will wait for the freebie. --Mike L. |
IBOC Crap News
"Michael Lawson" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message .com... "Michael Lawson" wrote in message ... . I'm still waiting on that one happening. There are still plenty of people out there who haven't bought their new digital TV yet, technological improvement or not. No Congressman wants to be seen as blowing off a big constituency like the elderly on a fixed income who can't afford the new sets; Congress will keep extending the deadline until enough old televisions have died off to make it practical. Aside from that, the way other prices have been rising lately I don't think that people will be putting a digital converter or a digital television at the top of their "to purchase" list anytime soon. They have developed a plan to provide digital cable converters to anyone for free. Makes old sets totally usable via downconversion of digital to analog. That'll be interesting, but they have to fund it and advertise it first. I can't see the big box stores being too thrilled about it, either, since it means that the people who might consider upgrading their television now will wait for the freebie. It is federally funded. The government needs the revenue from the vacated spectrum. |
IBOC Crap News
David Eduardo wrote: "Michael Lawson" wrote in message ... . I'm still waiting on that one happening. There are still plenty of people out there who haven't bought their new digital TV yet, technological improvement or not. No Congressman wants to be seen as blowing off a big constituency like the elderly on a fixed income who can't afford the new sets; Congress will keep extending the deadline until enough old televisions have died off to make it practical. Aside from that, the way other prices have been rising lately I don't think that people will be putting a digital converter or a digital television at the top of their "to purchase" list anytime soon. They have developed a plan to provide digital cable converters to anyone for free. Makes old sets totally usable via downconversion of digital to analog. Doesn't matter. You're BUSTED! |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:18 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com