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Technology

(Short-, Medium-, Long)wave Radio Meets Digital Stereo 194

cryptec writes "Today shortwave radio will have some new life pumped into it as the German broadcaster Deutsche Welle will be the first full time shortwave broadcaster of DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale). DRM is a full stereo fully digital broadcast system. The quality of the broadcasts are close to that of FM radio. For samples check out this link." Akai adds this link to an article in the San Francisco Chronicle with some more information, like the involvement of the BBC and Voice of America in this undertaking.
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(Short-, Medium-, Long)wave Radio Meets Digital Stereo

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  • DRM? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Roto-Rooter Man ( 520267 ) <cleanthosepipes@hotmail.com> on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:14PM (#6219010) Homepage Journal
    I don't think that's a popular acronym around here.
  • by cruppel ( 603595 ) * on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:14PM (#6219013) Homepage

    Come on, we've heard enough about DRM from M$, now from German DJs?!?

  • Is there actually much point to this? In order to use it, people will have to replace pretty much all their existing equipment, in which case there are probably better alternatives. I may be wrong though, as I never listen to radio or watch TV.
    • In order to use it, people will have to replace pretty much all their existing equipment

      See, they said stereo, and eveyone knows these SW wonks have loads more than just one crystal set laying around...soooo. They'll just wind one up for use w/the LEFT channel, and then dial in another Radio Shack Gold Klondike SkyMaster SW68-006 Horizon Buster II for the RIGHT channel, and won't we be the stupid ones :)

      Yes, Earl??? Dorothy, I gotta call the guys over at NASA...there's something going on up there. Wh
  • Nice! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by meringuoid ( 568297 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:15PM (#6219021)
    Well, it sounds nice, over the web... Of course, that's before the /. effect strikes :-)

    Digital radio over SW sounds interesting. I wonder if old Auntie's going to pick this one up? I gather BBC services got cut over North America recently in favour of web broadcasts... maybe digital technology will allow that to be reinstated in the future?

    • Re:Nice! (Score:5, Funny)

      by wfberg ( 24378 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:36PM (#6219172)

      Digital radio over SW sounds interesting. I wonder if old Auntie's going to pick this one up? I gather BBC services got cut over North America recently in favour of web broadcasts... maybe digital technology will allow that to be reinstated in the future?


      Sure. You see, it's far cheaper to use as-yet-experimental state-of-the-art technology than to continue using transmitters and technologies that have been in use for decades and that are well understood and easily serviced by thousands of technicians.

      The new transmitters will no doubt be fitted in, say, a few weeks. Then, in about three months, just about every household in North America will have bought the new receivers, and switch to tuning in small transistor radio sets to BBC broadcasts, instead of, say, surfing pornography or using AOL. Once the BBC starts digital broadcasts, well, no one will want, or need, broadband internet connections!

      Notice that the bitrates used in these AAC streams are wayyyy too high to ever be transferred over a dial-up connection. Even IF PCs could be equipped with AAC decoders, or similar codecs, such as ogg vorbis, the bitrates needed, some even exceeding 22 kilobits per second would prove a lethal hurdle for people who would want to listen to a stream using such a "magical" codec on their PCs..

      Plus, other, existing, methods of delivery for digital radio, such as satellite, are clearly inferior to this new technology.

      </SARCASM>
      • cynicism is cheap. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Erris ( 531066 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @11:24PM (#6219946) Homepage Journal
        You miss the big picture. Bandwith that onec was negelected due to poor quality can now be used to send reasonable quality sound around the world. There is NO radio technology currently used who's transmision has not been well understood since Maxwell. The change is in frequency hopping and digital encoding. It is doing neat stuff and provign over and over that there is no scarcity of available broadcast specturm. Whey you grok this, you might condlude that satellite is an expensive way to get the message around the world. If you don't grok it, I doubt anyone will miss your input.
        • by wfberg ( 24378 )
          There's nothing wrong with digital over AM/SW. It's just that these experiments are in NO way relevant to the current operation of the BBC world service, or any other radio station. It will takes some years to develop this technology further AND, most importantly, it will take *decades* before the installed base reaches any sort of critical mass. Before that happens this is a play thing.

          With regard to your comments about satellite being expensive - already companies are selling satellite tuners that connec
  • by wowbagger ( 69688 ) * on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:15PM (#6219022) Homepage Journal
    Obviously, you will need special gear to receive this - they are using COFDM so your normal shortwave rig is unlikely to give you anything meaningful.

    I suppose IF you had a single-sideband rig with a wide enough filter set, and IF you then used your computer, you COULD decode this, but the usual means is going to be a dedicated receiver.

    (Hmmm. Have to see if I can get the spec, and see if I can write a decoder for it....)
    • by SuperQ ( 431 ) * on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:35PM (#6219159) Homepage
      it will have to be a good signal, considering the kind of character drops I got when a friend (WB0POQ) was demonstrating PSK31, the bandwidth fits in normal SSB, and we get about line of text for every 10 seconds of tx.

      -KC0NBY
      • by Beryllium Sphere(tm) ( 193358 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:17PM (#6219408) Journal
        Well, PSK31 doesn't have error checking like DRM does. DRM has configurable "robustness modes" for use in more or less noisy environments.

        Did you ask your friend to put the PSK31 signal on the speaker? The really cool thing about PSK31 is that your computer can copy a signal you can't even hear.

        (For anyone who's wondering, we're still talking about digital radio. PSK31 is a modulation technique for text which fits a slow TTY-like signal into 31.5 Hz of bandwidth).
        • The really cool thing about PSK31 is that your computer can copy a signal you can't even hear.
          Umm yeah that's cool that I can't hear radio waves, I think.
      • Well now, the question is how many megawatts were you using ? ;)

        Most likely you guys weren't using more than a few hundred watts, or an antenna more than 100 feet off the ground.

        But not everyone can be allowed to run a megawatt generating gas turbine to power the radio rig in their back yard, otherwise braces, metal rimmed glasses, and umbrellas would become unpopular very fast.

        Broadcasters always have the edge over certin technical problems becase they can pump out megawatts, have 1-2 thousand feet towe
    • COFDM?

      My understanding of these matters is limited, but the description on their website makes it sound like they are using a sort of spread-spectrum scheme.

      They claim signal quality equal to FM... but I suppose that depends on how much data redundancy they have across their frequency range. They claim to be able to reconstruct missing or corrupted sections of data... is there some error checking built into this as well?

    • Ten-tec has instructions on their web site about how to do this with their receivers. Apparently you need 12-16KHz of receiver bandwidth, and software: "This software is only available through the consortium via the DRM Software Radio web site located at www.drmrx.org. It is not available through Ten-Tec or any other distributor. "
    • Not so special (Score:5, Interesting)

      by poptones ( 653660 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:15PM (#6219393) Journal
      A receiver with a wideband IF output (ie just about any ham receiver), a PC, and a soundcard. That ain't so special; some of you need to free your minds, much less free your radios. [gnu.org]
      • Re:Not so special (Score:3, Interesting)

        by wowbagger ( 69688 ) *
        Not quite - the IF out on most ham rigs is 10.7 MHz. You are going to have a problem sampling that with your soundcard, as your soundcard's inputs will filter that right out.

        You'd need to bring that down with another mixer to below about 20 kHz so that the filters on the soundcard won't trash it, or you would have to bypass the filters on your soundcard and subsample it.

        • Re:Not so special (Score:3, Interesting)

          by poptones ( 653660 )
          Not exactly. By "wideband" I mean post I-F but before audio filtering. This is fairly common even on those "world radio" sets you buy at consumer goods stores (I want to say wal-mart but I'm not sure if wallyworld has one. I'm confident, however, radio shack has more than one model like this). The "wideband" output will be something like 100-100khz instead of 100-10khz, and this can be sampled by a soundcard. back when FM stereo was new many FM radios were retrofitted just this way: take the IF output and r
          • Re:Not so special (Score:3, Interesting)

            by pe1rxq ( 141710 )
            Wideband outputs are totally useless for drm.
            These outputs are past the demodulater, so you get a unfiltered basenband signal.
            You need a IF signal as that still has the properties of the RF signal. Most smallband FM rigs or AM rigs have a second IF of 455 or 473 Khz which can be mixed down to 12Khz rather easily. This can then be sampled with an audio card.

            Jeroen
    • by tweakt ( 325224 ) * on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:22PM (#6219433) Homepage
      This is a perfect application for Software-Defined Radio... see GNURadio [gnu.org].

      It's already been used to decode HDTV signals [slashdot.org].

      Slashdot also covered [slashdot.org] this technology a couple years ago.

      • I am well aware of GnuRadio - in fact, if you look at the FAQ, you will see I am quoted in it.

        Also, I do Software Defined Radio [p25.com] for a living.

        However, the point of my previous message is that the average person with the average receiver is not going to be able to receive this signal.
    • by emeb2 ( 536129 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @10:27PM (#6219705) Homepage Journal
      Yes, but not too special. A slightly modified Shortwave Receiver and your computer running this software: ww.tu-darmstadt.de [tu-darmstadt.de] It's even available for Linux!
    • (Hmmm. Have to see if I can get the spec, and see if I can write a decoder for it....)

      If you really want the spec visit the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) website [etsi.org], search [etsi.org] for Digital Radio Mondiale, register for free and download the system specification.
  • The first? (Score:4, Funny)

    by ShadyG ( 197269 ) <bgraymusic@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:16PM (#6219026) Homepage
    the German broadcaster Deutsche Welle will be the first full time shortwave broadcaster of...a full stereo fully digital broadcast system.

    Hardly the first. Lisp has been doing this for decades.

    -- ShadyG
  • ham radio (Score:2, Interesting)

    by tadheckaman ( 578425 )
    amatuer radio might be able to use this, since they dont need a boat load of bandwidth, only a tiny bit. They allready have VHF and UHF digital radios, too, so I dont see why it wouldnt work on HF.
    • Re:ham radio (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Beryllium Sphere(tm) ( 193358 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:11PM (#6219370) Journal
      At first glance it looks like the big win would be using the error correction protocols to get through noise and cope with hostile ionospheric conditions.

      "The RF bandwidth can be chosen between 4.5,5, 9, 10, 18 and 20 kHz", according to an article at drm.org. Ham voice transmissions already fit inside 3KHz.

      There's also a bucket of features which are great for broadcast, like redirect pointers to better frequencies, which are irrelevant bloat in the ham world.
    • Digital modes do work on HF...see this link [teleport.com] for info.

      One of the oldest digital HF modes was FSK RTTY (radio teletype), which you could send text at 45 baud. It lead to AMTOR text at 100 baud. Then came PACTOR at 200 baud, still very popular, with built-in ARQ and compression. PACTOR begot PACTOR II and III, GTOR, CLOVER, PSK HF modes.

      PSK31 is popular now, but is intended for human-to-human highly reliable communication at 31 baud.

      You will notice that the Amateur digital modes are all extremely narrowb
  • BURN THEM! (Score:4, Funny)

    by NeoPotato ( 444954 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:21PM (#6219070)
    Deutsche Welle will be the first full time shortwave broadcaster of DRM

    Broadcasting DRM! How dare they! First, they try to stuff copy-protected CDs down our throats. Then they introduced copy-protected HARDWARE! And now, they're trying to RESTRICT OUR RADIO!

    WE MUST BURN TH-eh? Read the article? Bah! I'm fighting Digital Rights Management! No time for that!
  • Text of website... (Score:4, Informative)

    by tadheckaman ( 578425 ) <tad&heckaman,com> on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:27PM (#6219111) Homepage
    The British Broadcasting Corp., Voice of America and other international broadcasters launched digital short-wave radio service Monday, promising to provide near-FM quality in the place of static-filled signals.

    Digital broadcasts don't increase a station's range, but they eliminate static and let broadcasters transmit text, such as news updates and song information, with the audio signal. For now, digital radio receivers are considerably more expensive than analog radios.

    The Digital Radio Mondiale consortium launched its digital service at a global radio meeting in Geneva.

    "DRM's introduction will forever alter the course of radio broadcasting," said Peter F. Senger, chairman of the consortium, which has more than 80 members.

    The initial signals were transmitted from a nearby mountain in France shortly after 8 p.m., when Senger gave the word during a ceremony in conjunction with the World Radiocommunication Conference in Geneva. The conference is held every few years to decide airwave issues such as the sharing of radio and satellite frequencies.

    Simultaneously, other short-wave broadcasters started using digital transmitters in different parts of the world. The transmissions received at the reception featured voices in Chinese, French, English, German, Russian and Spanish, followed by static-free music.

    For the foreseeable future, broadcasters will use both traditional analog systems alongside the digital transmissions so people with traditional radios will still be able to tune in. At first, broadcasts will be aimed at Europe, North America, the Middle East, Australia and New Zealand.

    Digital radio signals are duplicated enough so that even if some are lost from interference, the receiver is able to put the transmission back together so it can be heard correctly. And Senger said the system uses much less electricity than analog, which will save broadcasters considerably on their biggest cost item.

    Although the Federal Communications Commission has approved a different digital standard for U.S. domestic broadcasters, Senger said the new system is meant to be universal and could eventually be used in the United States.

    Other broadcasters in Europe, Asia and Canada have been using digital transmissions for several years. That system, known as Eureka 147 or DAB, uses a different set of frequencies than traditional AM, FM or short-wave bands.
  • by victorvodka ( 597971 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:36PM (#6219164) Homepage
    Say what you want to about the utility of digital music over short-wave, I think it's a fascinating development. It's just another big application of Peer to Peer technology, one completely bypasses the internet. It's not just music that can be broadcasted this way - files can be sent and they could contain anything - newspapers, video, software, worms - and they could come from anyone with enough power to broadcast them. If the use of such technology becomes widespread enough - look for this becoming just another way to suck data into your computer, no matter how isolated you happen to be.
    • Hmm... not so sure about your P2P dream.

      Its one thing to stream digital data and have it picked up by a device and spat out via a DAC.

      Its another thing altogether to have to co-ordinate lossless data transmission. You are going to need a protocol that handles retransmission CRCs etc... i.e. some sort of transmission control protocol maybe?

      People have been getting all sorts of stuff. Digital stuff over SW for a long time now, bouncing packets of meteor trails containing e-mail and shit.

      Good idea... bit l
    • I know that Peer to Peer is a "big thing" these days, but this is too much of a stretch.

      Broadcasting over shortwave is not peer to peer, it's one-way! It costs a lot of money and requires a lot of permits to build a shortwave station strong enough to actually send data long distances.
    • These wavelengths aren't so great for reliable transmissions. They tend to come in and go out depending on the weather, time of day, solar activity and every other variable. Sometimes nearer transmitters get lost but nuch more distant ones can be tuned in.

      I suppose if you had a reciever and a transmitter, with a lot of bands open, and can "hunt" bands, it might work but those are big ifs. You'll be able to transfer data, but my guess is that bandwidth and latency are still big issues, but still secondar
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:43PM (#6219209) Homepage
    I'm suddenly starting to wonder just how much modern digital techniques bring to the party. For example, remember the technique of bounding signals off of meteor trails? I believe they recorded audio at normal speed, then waited for a meteor trail and squirted it out at many times normal speed... that sort of thing would be trivial and cheap to do with digital technology.

    Maybe a LOT of old, low-fi, unreliable radio broadcast technologies can have useful new digital life. It could be very handy as a backup for satellite-based communications.
    • There's a commercial packet radio system around for long-distance trucking fleets that uses the meteor trail to do just that. It listens for a signal from home base then quickly sends a packet or two back. Good for digital store-and-forward of truck info etc.

      Maybe it was on slashdot? was a year or two ago now tho'
  • Why would you spend all the money on shortwave equipment when you already have companies scrambling to provide FM via satellite for screaming deals? It just doesnt't make money sense at this point. I would bet the signal quality is more consistent too.
  • Isn't going to fly (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ferreth ( 182847 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @08:49PM (#6219246) Homepage Journal

    'Ya know, I used to think short wave radio was cool - until I discovered internet broadcast. Now I can listen to stations around the world, without buying any extra gear.

    Maybe in the 3rd world, oh wait, the gear is going to be more expensive than SW radio - maybe not there either. Who is going to buy this to get the mass market price down? Not me.

    • Who is going to buy this

      Me, me, me, me! One of the reasons that internet broadcasting sucks, is that I have to use a lot of bandwidth for an FM quality stream... If someone wants to listen to something else, more bandwidth.

      Also, good luck taking your intrnet streams on the road. Sure, you CAN do it, but you probably need to listen to lower quality broadcasts, and are probably paying through the teeth for the data connection.

      Meanwhile, a small investment in some good equipment, and you can listen to th


  • DRM was a 4 letter word around Slashdot.
  • Citizen's bandits (Score:5, Interesting)

    by poptones ( 653660 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:29PM (#6219466) Journal
    Actually, it's never occurred to me until now that this same technique could (as another person here suggested) be applied to p2p communications. The FCC pretty much abandoned 11 metres long ago; there are several folks around here who still dabble in CB and not one of them is strictly "legal" - sliders, amplifiers, and even FM gear are all the norm on the band. It's awash in noise and crap but might actually be usable if some modern DSP methods were applied to communications. And, because it is (unofficially) unregulated, there is an opportunity for pretty much anyone with a CB and a PC with a soundcard to get involved.

    In an area where 802. gear is pretty much useless because of line of sight issues, this might be just the ticket. There is more bandwidth in an HF carrier than in a phone line, and using low cost DSP tx/rx front ends it would even be possible to utilize two or three channels at once.

    Hmmmm.... I think I need to go visit the neighbor.

    • there is an opportunity for pretty much anyone with a CB and a PC with a soundcard to get involved.

      I think you want something far more advanced than a soundcard. You would want something with DSS, and all sorts of other flow control, unless you just want to broadcast something small and simple a short distance.

      You are right though, I've been using a CB for as long as I can remember. 10+mile communications for tiny (handheld or vehical) units isn't unsusal, and the big units go much much further than tha

      • Congratulations. You just (re)invented packet radio [tapr.org]. Now go out and be happy with your 9600 baud connections.
        • The reason packet radio sucks is because it's limited by FSK and such.

          This ain't packet radio.

          • This ain't packet radio.

            Then explain how it's different to someone who thought packet radio was really cool, got a TNC, played with it for a few months and decided that they were wrong...packet radio was not cool, it in fact both sucked and blew at the same time. What could be done different at 11 meters that HF and VHF packet radio is not currently doing, short of being 802.11ish/long haul building to building wirelessish?
            • Re:Citizen's bandits (Score:3, Informative)

              by poptones ( 653660 )
              It doesn't have to be "short" of 802.11-ish long haul/personal ssh-ish. All that need be done is get rid of FSK and use a reasonably SOTA method - like cofdm, quam, etc.

              Modems use ~3khz of bandwidth to get >48kbps. HF channels have more than twice that bandwidth available, and if you are using a digital front end there's no reason at all you can't use more than channel at the very same time. Use two VHF channels (say, on the also-unregulated 49mhz band) and it's not at all unreasonable to expect >200

  • I like it! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by zakezuke ( 229119 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @09:32PM (#6219482)
    There are those who would be critical of such things, but I like it! Ham radio to broadcast digital media will open a new door to... dare I say it, multi-casting! Why bother broadcasting on the net when you can actually recieve digital media over shortwave / ham and not have it suck up your bandwidth. Took us long enough to converge these two technologies.

    Bit-torrent is a pretty cool and hip standard in it self, but imagine releases sent digitaly via the airwaves, using a simple 50ft long wire that can reach between seattle and finland. Not perfect mind you, even the best sets are going to have some unrecoverable packet loss, but hey. Not exactly ideal for let's say a linux distro, but through the use of checksums I can see how such a broadcast service could get you most of what you need, and anything that fails you can just download via standard means.

    And as a bonus... to people who have a broadcast license, could open the door to ham based ISPs. While a dated technology, short wave / long wave is a proven one. While i'm sure statalight would no doubt be superior, land based access would be cheeper to deploy, and can even be based on older tube technology.

    This is something i'd use, even if just to get music from overseas.

    • not all shortwave is HAM, and you generally can't use HAM for commercial purposes.

      So opening up a "HAM based ISP" is probably not legal in most places.

      • I will correct my self... while HAM might not be hip for comercial use, there is a medium wave alocation that is.

  • Anyone else read that as "douche well" instead of Deutche Welle?
  • The quality of the MP3's is no where close to FM radio.

    It sounds like, well, like shortwave.
  • Acronyms (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Luke-Jr ( 574047 )
    This is the 3rd definition of DRM now...
    1. Digital Restrictions Management (M$)
    2. Direct Rendering M(anagement?) (XFree)
  • What is to stop people from broadcasting SMS text messages or Internet traffic over shortwave radio? How much bandwidth is there to play with? Sounds like great wireless possibilities.
  • We have FM or Sat radio for this kind of quality.

    Part of what makes AM Medium or Shortwave so important is the ability to receive it with inexpensive receivers. If there is something you want or need to listen to there and you live in some third world country, chances are you're not going to be able to afford some nice new digital receiver.

    And remember that the third world is usually the target audience for this stuff. It's used to get religious or political programming to those who wouldn't otherwise h
    • If there is something you want or need to listen to there and you live in some third world country, chances are you're not going to be able to afford some nice new digital receiver

      Dude.... how much is a cellphone now? Aren't they giving them away in blister packs at the grocers?

      It's just another digitial radio. The only thing hindering this is a standard; if there were a WARC approved standard and a few broadcasters using it there would be twenty dollar receivers being sold at ratshack - and handed out i

      • how much is a cellphone now?

        How much is a mini-satellite dish? Obviously, it's super cheap, if not free, because the service charge is where they make up their money. No suck luck with shortwave radios, although, I admit it shouldn't be very expensive ($50) in a year or so if they mass produce them.
      • by ONOIML8 ( 23262 ) on Tuesday June 17, 2003 @07:05AM (#6221299) Homepage
        "Dude.... how much is a cellphone now? Aren't they giving them away in blister packs at the grocers?"

        In third world countries?!?!? The last time I was in one of those places they wern't giving anything away. Hell you couldn't even get a decent selection of sanitary food in some of those places.

        It's true that cell phones cost far less than they used to due to the scale of mass production. Still most retail for $150 US on up. The ones being "given away" are usually refurbs as those have no other market value and it's a cheap way for the carrier to get you to spend an airtime dollar if you're too cheap to sign a contract and buy a phone.

        The difference as I see it is that this radio market is going to be a tiny fraction of what the cellular communications market is. So I doubt there will be the kind of numbers you need to bring receiver price down that far that fast.

        Maybe the MW market will help drive the price down somewhat and make it afordable for the SWL market. But MW is a hurting market too. If you're in the US you might remember how the MW broadcasters tried like hell to save their market share with the miracle of AM stereo. Or maybe you don't remember that...which would make my point. A lot of people just don't bother with that band because they can get all the programming they want on the VHF FM band without propagation flutter and fade.

        Seems to me that the MW and SW listeners are a different breed with different requirements. They're not after high quality signal, they're just happy to have signal. They're not after full digital stereo news, they're just happy to hear the news at all.

        Besides, Rush Limbaugh gets his point across in analog mono just the same as he would in digital stereo. :)

        • AM stereo is a commercial broadcast medium. Where is the market for 802.xx cards? Hmmm? Is that "failing?" Personal communications is an entirely different animal; if you could add a card to your PC and a reasonable antenna that would enable you to have a relatively high speed, personal network, would you not buy that card? Once you're able to communicate on HF with "digital" there's no mandate that signal couldn't carry something other than audio information.

          In the US most cellphone proviers will give you

      • Oh yeah, like America is going to adopt a standard just because every other country in the world does.

        Metric, PAL, GSM, ...
  • One of the DRM organization's publications says they intend to provide "fair, reasonable, non-discriminatory worldwide access under one license to patents essential for implementing the international DRM standard," but what they consider fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory might not be what open source programmers think of as such. Does anyone know whether it will be possible to extend GNU Radio to handle this encoding?
  • by Newer Guy ( 520108 ) on Monday June 16, 2003 @11:47PM (#6220030)

    In the Harris booth they weren't even running it in stereo. They were using mono voice and it sounded just awful - full of really bad artifacts that made the speaker sound like he was gargling liquid while speaking.

    A German fellow came up and was listening to the audio on a second headphone. he commented at how awful it sounded. Turns out that he does DSP for a living - perceptual coding in particular. he had done some work on the coser used and was embarrassed at what he was hearing on the headphone.

    By contrast, the DRM samples I hear here sound just great! ...and this with dual (dueling?) bit rate conversions (analog > DRM > MP3 > analog).

    FM DAB sounds somewhat better...but then again is's using a 96K bit rate - even Windows Media sounds good at that high a bit rate!

    What I'd like to hear is OGG at both the 32k bit rates of AM DAB and the 96k bit rates of FM DAB... My guess is that it would sound great!

  • DRM is the world's only
    non-proprietary, digital system for short-wave, medium-wave/AM and long-wave with the ability to use existing frequencies and bandwidth across the globe.


    Well thank God it's not based on WM9. Unfortunately some DAB radio solution manufactures are looking into WM9 instead of MP1 layer II. I can only conclude they are mad and want their company (and the world) to be ruined like Sendo.
  • DRM Sales pitch (Score:3, Informative)

    by cocotoni ( 594328 ) on Tuesday June 17, 2003 @03:26AM (#6220702)
    It is an amazing coincidence, but I was at the sales pitch for DRM last Friday. Well, apart from things being rehashed here on /. some insider information:

    DRM is going to be certified by ITU (International Telecomms Union), basicaly the body that gives the certs for these kind of things.

    Most of the digital radio concepts failed because they were able to produce a small run of say 10,000 receivers that would cost an arm&leg when they hit the streets. Well, it seems that DRM will not share this fate, since China, having poor radio coverage in rural areas (FM not viable, shitty AM/SW reception) has chosen DRM as their new standard. Starting run will be ~14mil receivers, so from start they will be able to produce them dirt cheap. Basically the deal is that the West will supply the transmitters, and China will flood the market with cheap receivers.

    Otherwise the test rig shown at the pitch sounded really good.
  • If anything has the potential to take back the commercial airwaves (AM/FM) from ClearChannel, it is digital radio concepts like this. Is this a step in the right direction? No. It's a sprint in the right direction.

    Screw IBOC. AM/FM need a digital makeover, not a legacy-supporting and shitty sounding downgrade.

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