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posted by janrinok on Tuesday April 28 2015, @03:43PM   Printer-friendly
from the elites-with-flawed-data-making-choices dept.

El Reg reports

With digital reaching its audience targets, the government set a 2017 date for the death of analogue FM radio in [Norway].

[...]However, the Norwegian Local Radio Association disputes the communications ministry's figure, pointing instead to Norwegian Government Statistical Bureau data that "listening to DAB radio is presently limited to 19% on a daily basis."

In an e-mail sent to Vulture South [El Reg's Australian operation], the association says the Minister of Culture's announcement swept up DVB-T and Internet radio to claim that "digital listening" had hit the 50 per cent target that triggers an FM switch-off.

The association also notes that an all-DAB nation would provide a lot less service to motoring tourists without digital radios in their cars. "This proposed change means that most visitors will not be able to listen to national channels or public radio for emergency alerts, traffic or other important information", the group said in a media release e-mailed to El Reg. It claims that a focus on large broadcasters would leave FM investments by community radio stranded.

The local broadcasters are backed by the Progress Party, a partner in the coalition government in Norway, [as well as by] the Greens.

Related: Norway to be First Nation to Switch Off National Analog FM Stations

 
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  • (Score: 2) by jmorris on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:09PM

    by jmorris (4844) on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:09PM (#176155)

    Ok, that is a valid point. On the other hand if the broadcasters on analog are still profitable it is because the listeners (i.e. the citizens) are still using the analog equipment too. If government is merely a creature of the People and not an entity pursuing goals of its own (as progressives believe) then if enough citizens are still using the shared resource the original spectrum assignment probably makes sense.

    It is a balance, if we want efficient spectrum use we have to keep assignments stable enough to encourage widespread adoption. If people become concerned that valuable investment in both transmitters and receivers (remember that many are integrated in large investments such as automobiles) will be obsoleted anytime some new tech gets some big money investors behind it we can end up with nobody adopting from that fear.

    Also, I forgot one other major factor in the story. Here in the U.S., and likely there since these trends are global, digital radio adoption rates are low because the government standardized it by granting a sole source monopoly to one vendor of both transmitters and receivers, although for receivers I think it is just a single source of silicon and others can in theory buy them and integrate them into equipment. And that sole source demands per minute/stream royalties on the transmitters so broadcasters can't just take their existing station and throw up a digital stream in parallel along with several alternate streams and see if the audience will buy the receivers and start listening to the new choices, they have to pay up front for each additional digital stream.

    In Europe that problem might not be as bad since digital has been operating there longer and the patents might be expired by now. But with the pressure to force adoption it would be worth following that money trail to see if it is part of the story.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:34PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:34PM (#176168)

    If people become concerned that valuable investment in both transmitters and receivers (remember that many are integrated in large investments such as automobiles) will be obsoleted anytime some new tech gets some big money investors behind it we can end up with nobody adopting from that fear.

    Spot on. Unless and until a digital standard has either been used unchanged for 10 years, or has had only backward-compatible changes during that time, I'm not going to buy it.

  • (Score: 3, Informative) by VLM on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:35PM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday April 28 2015, @05:35PM (#176170)

    because the government standardized it by granting a sole source monopoly to one vendor of both transmitters and receivers

    Yes google around for "HD Radio(TM)" and ibiquity corporation in the USA, and DAB for pretty much the rest of the world.

    DAB has its own unique problems, being so old it predates mp3, so logically an incompatible / semicompatible DAB+ has been released.

    DAB is 100% free open and royalty free, and unsurprisingly everything ibiquity touches involves paying substantial licensing fees, including for receivers. They're pretty hungry for money considering how little they do compared to their DAB "competitors" who are free. Its pretty much a microsoft vs linux story.

    ibiquity was pushing for all cell phones to have a FCC required broadcast radio in them awhile back. Because smartphone users listen to so much AM radio, of course, now that they have streaming internet usage, LOL.