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Trends in Terrestrial Broadcasting

17 comments to Trends in Terrestrial Broadcasting

  • Amen, Paul. I’m becoming increasingly convinced that the future of radio won’t be OTA. Not like the FM band is a huge chunk of spectrum, but it does have attractive properties for wireless broadband.

    If CCU et. al. are also becoming increasingly convinced that the future of radio is IP-based, it would be nice if they’d relinquish the spectrum so those that still care about the medium could try and resuscitate it. Dreaming, I know….

  • Doc John

    One day ,not in the far future,we shall just have one corporate media giant called illumicorp relayed via implanted microchip in our brain connected to our audio visual cortex that we cannot turn off if we choose . EAS tests shall be frequent and we shall all halt in our tracks when our glorious leader graces us with a speech . What wonderful times these will be.

  • Paul Thurst

    @John, I think they would rather burn it to the ground then give up anything to people who will make it work again.
    @Doc John, There will be blood in the streets long before that happens. In any case, I’ll work on my tin foil hat designs, perhaps do up some drawings and post them.

  • Gary

    In any case, I’ll work on my tin foil hat designs, perhaps do up some drawings and post them.

    You’ll need at least two drawings for each design, shiny side in and shiny side out. Just sayin…

  • Paul Thurst

    I thought the shiny side was always out

  • Gary

    “I thought the shiny side was always out”

    Depends on whether you’re trying to prevent the CIYT (chip in your tookus) from transmitting or receiving.

  • Rob

    Don’t you have any laws over there to deal with too few people having too much stake in the media or is that seen as a divine right in the US?

  • Erik Bagby

    Paul, this isn’t just a debate in the broadcast world. In public safety communications, we’re going through the same changes. Fewer and fewer RF engineers and radio technicians, more and more “IT” people. Problem is many of those in HR departments think all communications are IT related and they aren’t. It’s pretty scary to think that people who have no background in the RF propagation, signal generation, modulation sciences, circuit theory and design, are put in charge of large radio communications systems. They can certainly tell you the IP address of any controller gateway, but if it isn’t WIFI or 4G they go blind, deaf and dumb to the RF infrastructure side.

    Ultimately, as in broadcast, that work is now farmed out to vendors and independent contractors. I guess it’s good for those of us who know how to do this stuff. I would welcome to teach others, but many of the typical “IT guys” are just in it for the paycheck and could care less about learning both the art and science of RF. Guess that’s why we’ll have job security so long as SOMETHING is radiating RF.

  • Paul Thurst

    @Rob, there are rules about media ownership, they have been “relaxed” since the 1996 Communications Act allowing one or two big companies to own most of the TV/Radio stations in any market. As those companies have deep pockets, they tend to drive down revenue in any given area forcing the other stations there to adopt their operating practices or perish. The NAB is looking for further deregulation, which may in fact happen depending on the outcome of the next election.
    @Erik, that is interesting, knew that cellular carriers were going through a similar shift but was not aware that public safety radio was as well. I suppose that all sectors are “adjusting” there work forces. As far as the job security, I am pessimistic (my wife says cynical). When you talk to the managers in broadcasting anyway, they seem unconcerned about the dwindling pool of engineers. Their attitude is that somebody will come and fix this stuff at the level of pay we want to pay them.

  • Rick

    “Their attitude is that somebody will come and fix this stuff at the level of pay we want to pay them.”

    I so agree with that. That and the fact that IP broadcast will soon be the norm. Talk about putting all of your eggs in one basket.

  • R. Sanson

    Found this clip of Sines Portugal signing off
    Longest Night
    Found the message quite universally spoken and deserves a link from the history section of this site? I try to photograph any of the Steam Radio at sites now before its too late.
    Ralph

  • Paul Thurst

    It is sad to see all those transmitters dark, unfortunately, it seems to be a growing trend with government shortwave. As I am typing this, I am listening to Radio Australia on 9580, which is my morning news from the Pacific Rim. Shortwave is a good medium, however with the drive toward BPL, it may not be listenable in most of this country, which is a shame. In any case, what happens to sites like Sines is soon the mice and rats will move in, eventually the roof will leak, etc. If they have any notion of turning those transmitters back on, it will require lots of work, otherwise they are just so many tons of scrap metal.

  • Lee Rust

    Austerity. That’s what the future looks like, and not just in radio broadcast. Control of whatever real wealth remains will most likely be concentrated within the “one percent”. That’s what the worldwide demonstrations are all about. We have lived though a wonderful period of peak everything, and it’s a long way back down the mountain.

  • Erik Bagby

    Cumulus-Citadel merger: another bad idea. Just heard one of my longtime favorite jazz stations (WMAL HD2 in Washington, DC) announce tonight “Starting December 1, the ONLY WAY to get Smooth Jazz 105.9 is on HD Radio”

    Great minds hard at work at the Cloud Company! So let me understand this, you are axing the future of radio, online streaming, which reaches anywhere you can get an IP address, for some already has-been half-ass digital format that only reaches say, 50 percent of your coverage contour? I guess it doesn’t matter anyway, even if I did own an HD radio, it would take a good tropo or meteor scatter to hear it, as I’m about 700 miles outside their transmitter’s contour.

    Oh well, thanks WMAL aka WJZW HD2. You’ve provided some great listening through the last couple of years via my Verizon Wireless phone. I guess Verizon will be happy as I’m no longer burning through 4GB of data a month. Most recently I took a trip through the Nantahala National Forest in western North Carolina, and your station provided an awesome soundtrack via my VZW Iphone. (Amazing plug for Verizon, who’s CDMA 3G network had solid coverage all through the forest. Must have some mega mountain top cells. AT&T work phone read NO SERVICE)

    Too bad there aren’t any well programmed FM stations in Atlanta that play anything other than the same five rock songs, hip hop, country, or right wing rhetoric.

    and they wonder why radio is dying? sounds more like a suicide mission to me.

  • Buzz

    “With the repeal of the Smith-Mundt act, does this open the door for some form of domestic shortwave service?”

    Domestic shortwave service from whom? VOA?

    The Broadcasting Board of Governors wishes to curtail shortwave wherever it can, the valuable youth market knows nothing of shortwave, and shortwave has nothing to do with “mobile broadband” which is the current hobbyhorse like the “National Information Infrastructure” was just a few years ago.

    Or perhaps you mean a domestic shortwave service from private stations. FCC Rule 73.788 prohibits purely domestic shortwave broadcasting. Private shortwave stations must design, build and operate their stations for foreign audiences.

    The rule could and should be changed, but who has the appetite and competence to campaign for it effectively?

  • Paul Thurst

    The VOA has stated that it wants out of HF broadcasting in favor of an IP distribution system, so no. Private stations would have to petition the FCC for a change in 73.788, which would be to their advantage, if nothing else than to reduce the power bills. There are a certain number of private shortwave stations that broadcast programming primarily destined for domestic audiences already.

  • I am looking for an audio engineer for a CHHA 1610 AM, community radio station. Please, can you contact me trough my email or phone. (redacted)
    With deep gratitude,
    Father Hernan Astudillo.

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