159 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
159 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3276
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Title: HPR3276: Deepgeek's thoughts about HD Radio
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3276/hpr3276.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:01:46
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio episode 3,276 for Monday the 22nd of February 2021.
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Today's show is entitled Deep Geeks Thoughts About HD Radio and in part of the series,
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Information Underground, It is hosted by Deep Geek and in about 10 minutes long and
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Karimaklin flag.
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The summer is, Klaatu reads the post by Deep Geek.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An HonestHose.com.
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Hey everybody, this is Klaatu, you're listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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A friend of mine, Deep Geek, you might know him from Hacker Public Radio, emailed me the
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other day and asked me if I'd be interested in reading for him on his behalf, a script
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that he had written for an episode and just didn't have time to to record himself.
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I had to record and edit and I said yes because honestly I have a Hacker Public Radio.org
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email address.
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I don't know what status I am in terms of administration but I feel like I need to pull
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my own weight around here for a change so I'm doing things like this.
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So here's Deep Geeks Thoughts on HD Radio and from from this point on more or less,
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I will read it from his perspective.
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My mixed feelings about HD Radio, I love music especially while I drive and I really
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do love my car stereo, but I have many mixed feelings about HD Radio.
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HD Radio is American Digital FM Radio, even though it's a proprietary system, I love
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its capabilities.
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However, when the rubber hit the road, I found that it came up short.
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I don't want to go into whether or not we could have used one of the already existing
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digital radio standards here but I'd like to concentrate instead on what digital radio
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could be in America and what it ended up being.
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Let's talk capabilities.
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HD Radio as a technology offers many capabilities.
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There's hybrid mode, backward compatible analog audio with digital audio in a sub-channel,
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multi-casting.
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You can have one or more additional digital channels as well as the main audio channel.
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More digital offers five channels as opposed to stereo to channel.
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More akin to a movie theater experience, you get that kind of surround sound experience.
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Pure digital also offers higher audio quality with a fallback to a lower bit rate audio
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quality when you're at a greater distance from the transmitter.
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I've listed these in order of how familiar they are with most users of HD Radio in car
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receivers.
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Most people in America are experiencing the first two of these features, the hybrid mode
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and the multi-casting.
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That is to say, the FCC has mandated hybrid mode for its backward compatibility with existing
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analog car radios and most modern HD radio listeners have also probably noticed that when
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digital service is available, an indicator pops up on their car stereo offering three channels
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to choose from.
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HD radio commercials refer to this as the stations between the stations or under the
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stations.
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Often an adult pop or, as they say, triple A format in the radio industry will be on the
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analog and first HD channel with a news channel or a specialty genre like smooth jazz or
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Christmas music on a second or a third channel.
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Now let's talk about quality and selection.
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Not being a fan of triple A radio, I have had the experience of converting a car to HD
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radio at Best Buy with a car I've owned before my current one.
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I wanted greater variety in what I could hear while I drove around so I did this in order
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to have more channels.
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I also got, at the same time, the ability to plug a USB thumb drive full of MP3s into
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the stereo.
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In practice, this meant that I could listen to extra channels when close to New York City
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and the ability to hear pre-recorded MP3s of my favorite classical and alternative music
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elsewhere.
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What I've noticed is that quality suffered.
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It turns out that when in hybrid mode, which is that first one, the backwards compatible
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one, when in hybrid mode, you are left with 96 kilovits per second of digital streaming.
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There's a chart from a web page that shows the common multicasting configurations, which
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I'll link to in the show notes.
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A common configuration is main analog content on 48 kilovits per second on channel 1, secondary
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audio content 48 kilovits per second on channel 2, and an additional 24 kilovits per second
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on channel 3.
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As most people who have generated their own MP3 files know, bitrate like 48 kilovits
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per second is the most important determination of audio quality.
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What does a geek do when he finds himself up against the division of bitrate?
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Well, he creates a test file or two and encodes them in different amounts of bitrate
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to see what he can hear.
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I've noticed by doing this experiment that I can differentiate up to 128 kilovits per
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second.
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Can't really tell the difference between, say, 128 kilovits per second and 160 kilovits
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per second.
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Probably because I'm an old man, but hey, can't do anything about that.
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Inactuality, does this really matter?
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Again, I'm blessed with location.
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At work, the location that I'm often sent to, I'm in range of both a classical station
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in digital, as well as a local analog repeater.
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And I did indeed find that I would rather listen to classical on the old school analog
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FM rather than its 48 kilovits per second digital version.
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However, I don't mind listening to alternative at the lower bitrate, and I do like that same
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classical station through an iHeart radio app, which plays it at 128 kilovits per second.
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I think it's time to concede that there needs to be an admission of or a recognition of
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what's good enough.
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For example, since I can't tell the difference between 128 kilovits per second and 160 kilovits
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per second, personally, for me, 128 kilovits per second is good enough.
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And while I believe that, again, good enough for me is 128 kilovits per second for classical,
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48 kilovits per second for alternative, it might not be that way for other people.
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Let's talk about financial pressure for the media company.
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The media company or the radio station or the producer of the curated audio program
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has their financial pressures to contend with.
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Local FM analog stations pay a lot in electric to broadcast, not to mention all the other
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costs involved, like salaries, licensing facilities, imagine adding to this the licensing and
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royalty fees of a proprietary technology and a five-digit price tag for new equipment.
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This cost makes stream hosting look like a stroll in the park, and we aren't talking
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about an unlimited bandwidth web hosting account.
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Just ask truly popular podcasts how quickly unlimited hosting plans get changed to a
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more metered approach.
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Stream hosting companies are a lot more cost-effective than converting to digital broadcast.
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So what happens is that the FM radio station adds an internet stream to their lineup.
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Once people all over the internet get their 128 kilovits per second stream via internet
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apps, some of which are pre-built into new car stereos, it may not make sense to have
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a digital broadcast anymore.
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The tendency is now that the very largest of the media companies can afford to have a
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digital broadcast and smaller operators have an app as their digital operation.
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If a smaller operator does modernize HD radio, the possible revenue streams from a second
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audio channel may be the only thing making them willing to put the cost of the digital
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conversion.
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So why would the broadcaster decide to forego a second audio channel they could hawk just
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to have their primary audio channel go out with more bandwidth, especially if they could
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simply tell any listener who really cares about audio quality, that their web stream offers
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more quality than the FCC currently allows HD radio operators to deliver.
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Let's talk about financial pressure for the listener.
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On the other hand, who can afford to build a listening room for high fidelity audio?
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Many people don't even know, for example, that the humble compact disk has a high tech
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successor called the Super Audio CD.
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As I've said before, I've discovered that 128 kilobits per second MP3 is good enough
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for me.
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It's also the standard that my internet radio from Ocean Digital runs over my home media
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server.
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I do have a couple of 48 megahertz FLAQ files I can play back on my home computer, but
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as far as I can tell, I like the sound of those the same as 44.1 and would probably only
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listen to them if I wanted to hear a different orchestra playing a song that I like rather
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than listening to them specifically for increased audio quality.
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As an extra treat here at the ending, I've asked a questioned internet historian Jason
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Scott, who made a podcast about my question, and I'll link to that in the show notes.
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And that's everything.
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Folks, that's DeepGeek talking about HD radio.
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It's a topic that I, Clatsu, know nothing about, I've not heard HD radio far as I know,
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but that's DeepGeek's thoughts about it.
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Maybe you have thoughts about it.
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Maybe you want to record an episode in response to this.
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Who knows?
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The possibilities really are limitless.
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Unlike the bandwidth, it requires to send out a digital signal from HD radio.
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See, I did learn something.
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Thanks for listening.
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I'll talk to you next time.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
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and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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On this otherwise stated, today's show is released on the earth.
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Create a performance, attribution, share a life, 3.0 license.
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