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11-11-2008, 10:59 | #1 |
HOMO-Sapien
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chelmsford
Posts: 6,692
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Digital broadcasting..
Ok, I'm going to ask what might seem a daft question, but in the office we are having a debate which can't be settled.
The arguement is "Is digital broadcasting still sent as an analogue signal, albeit it's sending digital bits rather than an image." Surely, you can't actually broadcast an elecrical signal that represents digital bits. I was under impression that digital broadcasting requires a higher frequency than that of normal TV and voice. Surely, some kind of D/A or A/D conversion must occur? What do you think?
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11-11-2008, 12:20 | #2 |
Moonshine
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11-11-2008, 13:49 | #3 | |
ex SAS
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Quote:
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11-11-2008, 14:35 | #4 | |
Absinthe
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Cambridge
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Isn't analogue radio something like ~96k due to the compression used? DAB is 128k so a higher bit rate. Analogue may have the potential to sound better but from my rather basic listening tests DAB has always sounded better. |
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11-11-2008, 15:15 | #5 | |
Moonshine
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Location: Southampton
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However i'm sure you know as well as I that the difference between theory and reality of what arrives at your TV/Radio is vastly different and in such cases digital is virtually always going to be of superior quality in real usage terms. Digital broadcasts suffer far far far less from interference and even when they do, error correction is much more effective to rectify the problems, whereas analogue, once it has taken on an alteration is ruined really. Your average commercial radio is always going to produce superior results from digital compared to analogue.
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Last edited by divine; 11-11-2008 at 15:17. |
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11-11-2008, 14:01 | #6 |
BD Recruitment Officer
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I always thought it was. I get better sound from my DAB Radio than my Analogue Radio.
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11-11-2008, 15:18 | #7 | |
HOMO-Sapien
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chelmsford
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I would guess that all depends on how sensitive your hearing is and the sampling rate. A wave length from a digital broadcast would be manifested. Depending on the sampling during conversion, bits are missing. An analogue signal on the other hand is raw but is subjected to more interference. Would this be correct Feek? So going back to my OP, the digital signal is still broadcasted over an analogue wave length, but has a higher frequency and bandwidth. i.e. more signal gets through..
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I just got lost in thought.. It was very unfamiliar territory. Techie Talk | My gaming Blog | PC spec | The Admirals log |
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11-11-2008, 19:47 | #8 | |
ex SAS
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I hate all this digital is better than analogue crap. I reach over to the DAB box on my window ledge and tune in Radio 1 - 128kbps. Radio 4, the same. Talk Sport, 64kbps mono. Terrible. Call me a wireless snob. I probably won't disagree.
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11-11-2008, 19:55 | #9 |
Moonshine
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Southampton
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I've never managed to get anything close to a good analogue signal around here, digital is much better overall for the job at hand, IMO.
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11-11-2008, 21:45 | #10 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
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I don't think there's any such thing as a true analogue radio station in the UK (with the exception of ghetto set-ups and occasional broadcasts from Radio 3 or Classic FM). Most of the studio kit these days is digital, so even the purest of pure analogue almost certainly isn't.
Fair point about the compression though - it's a shame when broadcasters see fit to overdo the compression in order to cram more stations into a given frequency. Freeview suffers terribly from this - though in most cases people don't watch closely enough to notice. Of the options I've personally tried (which excludes VM), Sky is regrettably often the best option, though even that doesn't escape the bandwidth scrooge (HD channels, for starters). That doesn't justify the £44 I'm about to stop paying for it though. |
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