The death of analogue radio
Using a basic FM radio tuned to any BBC station and the pips always came in bang on time.
Tonight I noticed they were 40 seconds behind on my Squeezebox radio vs my clocks, atomic watch, PC & Nexus and the VM box. I dug out a digital clock I wrote the software for and made in the 90's that I know is spot on to prove my point. Something I hadn't considered with Internet services like radio. Promise this is not a case of OCD but more an observation that had me a bit confused until I realised I listen to Internet radio via my Logitech system. Once we lose the analogue radio then we will all be out a tadge if like me you use it to synchronise clocks etc. I also wouldn't want to be in a siege situation where one had used his Ipod to set his clock for an attack launch :) |
Re: The death of analogue radio
Rumours of the death of FM have been exaggerated ...
In my house I can tune to BBC radio 4 on my Freesat box, on the computer, on a DAB radio and on an FM radio and get four different opinions on when it's time for the World at One. :D I LOL at the DAB adverts being run by the BBC at the moment, with the comedy 70s black puppet talking about its "honey sweet sound". DAB is anything but. A good FM signal is vastly superior. They are never going to be able to get rid of FM. Radio and TV are two completely different media, used in completely different ways. People hang radios in their showers, they keep compact wind-up or solar radios on the windowsill for emergencies, they have them in their car dashboards, in their alarm clocks, their watches, phones, MP3 players ... There are billions of the things, and almost none of them can be adapted with a set-top box cheap enough to be a viable alternative to buying a completely new radio. |
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I wouldn't be without DAB in the car, in fact in-car use is probably the only thing keeping it alive by now. Can't stand listening to Five on mediumwave especially this time of year when the grey line looms in mid afternoon.
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DAB in my location is very patchy.
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Digital is crap (Audio or Video) -- I hope traditional AM/FM stations dont drop thier analogue side.... I have an internet radio and for the last month i havent had it plugged it,i listen on my traditional AM radio (I love AM) and it sounds much nicer!! |
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Analogue radio is far from dead, think about the number of cars alone that have radios, then theres mobiles, stereos etc.
It would required a phased in process over years. |
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They killed analogue TV pretty fast...
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Radios on the other hand are commodity items. They are cheap, they run on next to no power, they tend to accumulate until you have one in just about every room and most importantly you have them on in the background so the extra data services are next to useless most of the time. What would a set-top box adapter for a shower radio look like? What would it cost for one? More to the point, what would it cost to buy adapters, or new radios, for everywhere in the home we might want them? And how about our cars, where most people are happy with the original integrated radio-CD in the dashboard - how do you do a cost-effective DAB conversion on that? |
Re: The death of analogue radio
Handheld TVs? In-car TVs? Laptops/desktops with TV tuners? Mobile phones with TV tuners?
Meh, I don't have any TVs or (working) radios, but I suppose I get your point, radios are cheaper so people tend to have more... But then again ten years ago AM, MW, LW and FM radios were common whereas pretty much anything other than FM these days requires a dedicated device... |
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