[access-uk] Re: Interesting article concerning dab radio in Germanydigital radio

  • From: "Peter Beasley" <pjbeasley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 8 Mar 2008 11:15:47 -0000

I got that article from an american amateur radio bulletin which Ireceive by 
e-mail each week.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray's Home 
  To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Saturday, March 08, 2008 9:09 AM
  Subject: [access-uk] Re: Interesting article concerning dab radio in 
Germanydigital radio 


  Good to have this post here, and I've not seen it on the UK Radio list, but 
another article I saw in the last few days stated that around 200,000 DAB sets 
had been sold in Germany, and this with a population of 81 million!

  MeanwhleMeanwhile, another source, reported on UK Radio, says that secret 
talks are in progress here in the UK about DAB's here here!

  I find this very saddening because I feel that with more thought and wiser 
Government policy DAB could have been, should have been, so much better.  I 
don't regard the internet as a real alternative either.

  Cheers,

  From Ray 
  I can be contacted off-list at: 
  mailto:ray-48@xxxxxxxx 

    -----Original Message-----
    From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of 
Peter Beasley
    Sent: 7 March 2008 12:04PM
    To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Subject: [access-uk] Interesting article concerning dab radio in 
Germanydigital radio 


    EMERGING TECHNOLOGY:  GERMAN PUBLIC RADIO TO ABANDON EUREKA 147
    A once prominent digital audio broadcasting format soon could be a
    technical achievement of the past in one European nation.  This, as an
    oversight organization in Germany says its time to stop supporting
    Eureka 147. The organization responsible for setting fiscal policy for 
public
    broadcasting in Germany has deemed the Eureka-147 Digital Audio
    Broadcasting codec unworthy of further investment.  The KEF which
    oversees the financial aspect of DAB is calling for the equivalent of
    about $246 million slated to fund public-service DAB projects from 2009
    to 2012 to be reallocated to other projects.
    Since 2001, some $266 million has been allocated to KEF for Digital
    Audio Broadcasting projects. In explaining its recommendation to halt
    such funding after 2008, KEF said that receiver options remained
    limited in Germany and that public support for FM radio and the
    availability of satellite radio, Internet radio, podcasts and other
    outlets have changed the nature of radio broadcasting since DAB was
    first envisioned.But there is some strong opposition to such a phase out.  
A group
    called the Initiative Marketing Digital Radio is a European consortium
    of receiver manufacturers, transmitter network operators, program
    providers and institutions backing the DAB standard. It warns that
    Germany moving away from Eureka 147 could cause chaos.  It says this is
    because the digitalization of broadcasting is unstoppable.

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