James Cridland's blog

A radio futurologist writing about what happens when radio and new platforms collide

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On radio conferences, RadioDNS, DAB, and more

Posted on Sunday, March 21st, 2010 at 8:00am. #

The sea from Accra

Apologies for missing last week’s Sunday round-up. In my defence, I was in Accra, Ghana, working for the BBC World Service; and the internet connection was rather spotty. The photograph above makes it look rather idyllic; it wasn’t, quite, but was an amazing place I hope to blog about shortly.

It’s been a week of radio conferences. Justin Kings has a good writeup of the “Multimedia Meets Radio” event in Hilversum: an event I’d have liked to have been to, except it was organised to coincide with Radio Days Europe, which I was speaking at. Justin’s writeup means I don’t completely miss out, though. Justin’s speech is also online. And for those wondering when the Radio Festival and Radio At The Edge are this year: they’re together, in October, in Salford, according to CEO Trevor Dann. (Disclaimer: I’m a Radio Academy Trustee, though not involved in the organisation of either conference this year).

It’s not too late to become a member of RadioDNS; and help vote in the initial Steering Board. I’ve been nominated, and would welcome your votes for the Secretary position.

Anti-DAB campaigner Grant Goddard has a long moan about DAB converters for portable analogue receivers, saying they don’t exist. It would be nice, at some point, to hear an end to the negative campaigning on his blog, and see some practical suggestions as to how the radio industry can move forward. If he’s suggesting that the internet, or FM, or something else, is the correct future for the industry, then it would be good for him to come out and say so. As for the “mythical DAB adapter” – “so how exactly could any kind of gizmo be ‘added’ to such radios to transform them into DAB?” – he might like to examine a PURE Highway, a device which, cough, retransmits DAB signals onto FM for reception in your car (or home, for that matter). Mind you, it’s only been around since November 2007.

If you wondered what life was like for a BBC local radio breakfast presenter, you might enjoy this account of a typical day from BBC Surrey’s Nick Wallis. It looks like damn hard work. Other items of note: Fred Jacobs has a good viewpoint about showing audiences the results of your own research; RadioFail has a bit of Steve Wright reading out a rather embarrassingly made-up shout-out (loving the show, Steve); decent BBC chap Chris Kimber details the programmes he’ll miss on BBC 6music when if they get rid of it; and Paul Smith publishes his thoughts on the closure of BBC 6music.

Away from radio, Bitterwallet reports on some piss-poor PR release being reprinted verbatim by people who should know better. Scary.

In terms of beer, Pete Brown posts about the Bavarian Beer House in London: looks great. My very own Beertweet has a post about one of my favourite haunts in Brussels.

Finally, I’m guilty of not replying to some of the email I’m sent – let alone if I was sent a lot of letters. It’s lovely, then, to read this reply by NASA astronauts in response to an enquiry by a young Belgian. How thrilled must he have been to get this reply?

4 comments

John Handelaar
commenting at March 21st, 2010 at 4:56pm

The Pure Highway is the ONLY such product, and costs eighty quid, and doesn’t work indoors.

Seriously, James, that’s the most truly daft thing you’ve suggested in some time.

James Cridland
commenting at March 21st, 2010 at 6:31pm

Well, John, you’ve got me bang to rights: it is the only such “mythical DAB adapter”, yes.

Well, if you ignore the Intempo DA-01, another “mythical DAB adapter” which plugs into your hifi via your AUX input, and cost forty quid. http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dab-hifi.html#intempoda01

Or, the “mythical DAB adapter” from Matsui, the Matsui DA-1, which similarly plugs into your hifi via your AUX input, and cost thirty quid. (It’s on the same URL as the Intempo above).

Or, well, the “mythical DAB adapter” from a company called Genus, the Genus Du1, for fifty quid or so. http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dab-hifi.html#genusdu1

Now, look, all those are probably shite, and they’re probably not available any more either, and I’m certainly not recommending that you go out and buy them, since they look rubbish. But then, you’re not the one that doubts their very existence, or wonders “how exactly could any kind of gizmo be ‘added’ to such radios to transform them into DAB?”…

John Handelaar
commenting at March 21st, 2010 at 7:20pm

And none is in any sense an adapter, since the dozen or so radios that you and I have at home don’t have audio inputs.

Please try, by the way, not to retrofit the word ‘mythical’, which I didn’t say, into what I said. :)

I do have a generally poor opinion of DAB. It has quite a lot to do with crappy Winamp-playlist presenterless-and/or-VT’d programming, quite a lot to do with the completely-frickin’-insane licensing regime which leads to transmission costs bearing no resemblance at all to the actual market value of those services, and nothing at all to do with those sound-quality nutjobs.

In this case none of that matters a stuff though. Pretending that we can convert the existing receivers is silly. We can’t. You just reinforced that point by showing me several Hifi-only options that cost more than just buying a DAB set, and none that can actually adapt the radios you and I have in the kitchen, bathroom(*) or bedroom.

We’re all going to be stuck with those FM/AM sets for a *long* time, and we have to deal with it.

(* And until someone comes up with a battery-powered receiver that works indoors and lasts longer than the average shower , that one ain’t going nowhere.)

There are some valid objections to this sort of thing that are based in reason, comrade. Pretending otherwise doesn’t help.

Paul Easton
commenting at March 22nd, 2010 at 9:18am

I liked the pieced about the boy’s letter from Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.

I still have a signed letter from Gordon Cooper, one of the original ‘Mercury’ astronauts, following his space flight in May 1963. I was also sent an 8″x10″ picture and the ‘official’ NASA book of the flight. They remain personal treasures – and are still in their original NASA envelopes.

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