Today British radio blogger Grant Goddard cited a 2002 report that BIPE Consulting produced for the European Commission. The title was “Digital Switchover in Broadcasting.” Don’t let the fact that they’re talking about DAB, rather than “HD,” make you think it’s irrelevant to what’s been happening here.
Grant says the report “admitted that a significant motivation for introducing DAB radio was so that existing licensed European broadcasters could maintain market control in the face of competition from IP-delivered radio content produced by pesky foreigners.”
Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Just like the Big Boys of American radio -- who collectively control Iniquity -- backing a system that is not only technologically impractical to implement, but is also prohibitively expensive for smaller broadcasters.
The report was presciently pessimistic about the prospects of public acceptance.
You can read Grant’s post here: http://grantgoddardradioblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/benefits-of-dab-radio-insufficient.html (and his blog post has a hyperlink to the entire 236-page report).
Grant says the report “admitted that a significant motivation for introducing DAB radio was so that existing licensed European broadcasters could maintain market control in the face of competition from IP-delivered radio content produced by pesky foreigners.”
Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Just like the Big Boys of American radio -- who collectively control Iniquity -- backing a system that is not only technologically impractical to implement, but is also prohibitively expensive for smaller broadcasters.
The report was presciently pessimistic about the prospects of public acceptance.
You can read Grant’s post here: http://grantgoddardradioblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/benefits-of-dab-radio-insufficient.html (and his blog post has a hyperlink to the entire 236-page report).