Johnboy1951 wrote: » I have no interest these days in LW or MW. I admit to leaving them behind in the early 80s. A combination of FM and internet streamed radio, with maybe satellite also in the mix, is what I see as the ideal now. It would certainly cover all my needs, and the needs of those I know. AM or DAB is almost never used by those I know. Maybe others have different experiences.
Sam Russell wrote: » We need an AM station to act as an emergency broadcast platform as a single transmitter could cover most of the country. Athlone did the job once.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » That was indeed very beneficial ...... when the vast majority of the population had access to AM receivers. That has changed. The majority now use digital devices and phones. Those devices, in the majority, do not receive AM broadcasts. So on what would a general emergency broadcast reach the majority of the population now? On the other hand I accept there are some technical reasons for maintaining an AM capability which could be useful in a long term emergency situation.
Sam Russell wrote: » When we got the Euro, every house was supplied with a calculator that converted from IRP to Euro for free. It would be quite cheap to provide an FM/AM radio receiver that worked into earphones. If it was made available, we could keep it next to out Joe Jacob iodine tablets - you know - in case of emergency.
galtee boy wrote: » So why is DAB such a success in UK ?
Deleted User wrote: » ..... I might remind folk here again of the big internet radio outage which not only caused several weeks of outage but also rendered a substantial amount of older internet radios obsolete, when I say obsolete, they are not compatible with the new service that stores the radio stations as favourites but the actual list of stations as well so for weeks my roberts was useless as I was not in any way going to type the ip address + port of every single station ! this is what turned me off internet radio big time and this is the problem with internet in general, there can be many disruptions to services not possible with traditional transmitters.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Please do explain what this big outage was. I must have missed it somehow. You imply that all available internet radio stations suddenly went off air ......... really? ...... or do you mean that some proprietary radio you owned failed to work for some period of time, but the radio stations were still streaming?
Deleted User wrote: » No the stations were still streaming, tunein was not effected but quite a lot of internet radios connect to a service that went bust so they had to migrate to a new service. You could connect to a station by entering the ip address and port manually. Eah, no thanks it was a huge issue at the time. So if you used tune in or the stations own app you would have been fine.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » So nothing to do with internet radio per se, and all to do with some service you were connecting to. No wonder I never noticed ..... there was nothing to notice.
Deleted User wrote: » A service Roberts and many other internet radios were using. What internet radio are you using ?
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Logitech and apps on various devices.
Deleted User wrote: » Logitech ? never heard of them doing an internet radio app, I use tunein the odd time. Using mobile phones to listen to radio doesn't really float my boat.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » I probably should have mentioned that by using the logitechmediaserver app on PC/NAS/FileServer I can stream my own music on the Logitech radio also. It can also be controlled remotely ..... the larger one came with a remote control. For the lazy man
Gerry Wicklow wrote: » People going on about internet radio and DAB as the way forward always reminds me of the story about the Russian MiG fighter the US got hold of many moons ago. The yanks thought it hilarious that the MiG was still using valves (vacuum tubes) until they discovered they would survive a nuclear burst far better than any silicon based gear.
Deleted User wrote: » https://www.robertsradio.com/uk/products/radio/smart-radio/stream-94i That's the one I got, very impressive sound for the size of it but it's the last yoke I will buy with DAB which will probably be the last one I buy lol.
Oscarziggy wrote: » Is this the old MW mast -- bad news if it is .https://www.offalyexpress.ie/news/home/530097/offaly-landmark-set-to-be-removed-from-the-skyline.html
Sam Russell wrote: » There are many stories f how the Americans and British laughed at Soviet solutions. British. The Concorde engines fan blades were machined to an impossible tolerance to improve performance. The Russians achieved the same by using carborundum paste, like grinding in an engine valve. American. The Americans spent a fortune getting a ball point pen to work in zero gravity in space. The Russians used a pencil. I am sure there are plenty more. The old ways can be a better solution than the new. FM is better than DAB.
Deleted User wrote: » There is no reason not to use it. RTE gold on MW would get a lot of listeners with proper DJ's, but no, destroy their only decent station too while they're at it. They never put it up for sale or I bet even advertised it for lease. No, rather destroy perfectly usable infrastructure.
L1011 wrote: » Unused infrastructure with ongoing maintenance costs and no serious/sensible proposals for future reuse. Masts do not keep themselves upright by magic. Eventually they need to be replaced anyway, e.g. Truskmore a few years back.
L1011 wrote: » Have you any proof, at all, for that conjecture? Are you willing to fund keeping a white elephant around because you like it? As in personally fund it - not force the rest of the licence payers to fund your whim?
Deleted User wrote: » All RTE have to do is power it up make it a station again, advertise it and see what happens, but they would rather destroy it than say they were wrong about digital.