The first time I DXed KNX in the 70's, they were using the teletype. No idea when they stopped.I don’t remember KNX having teletype. During KFWB’s all-news days, I remembering hearing a teletype in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
The first time I DXed KNX in the 70's, they were using the teletype. No idea when they stopped.I don’t remember KNX having teletype. During KFWB’s all-news days, I remembering hearing a teletype in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
check out these two sites,By the way, does anyone know if there's a stream for listening to the AM broadcast? Or a specific WebSDR where it can be heard cleanly?
And a little bit of trivia here: Tom Rounds, the Poi Boy, KFRC PD and creator of American Top 40 had his first job out of college at WINS!Sounds like GOOD OLD 1010 WINS!!!!!!!! They were NYC's FIRST RnR MUSIC STATION . . . Sept, 1954 !!!!
I know I said that many times before . . . I'll say it again . . . They were NYC's FIRST RnR STATION . . . Sept, 1954 !!!!
Isn't that cheating? 🤔No, they think that the non-stop background sound may produce more PPM detections as the PPM encoder will find nearly non-stop opportunities to encode.
Why would that be cheating? All it does is enhance the chance of PPM detection in a talk based format where there are vastly fewer opportunities to insert the PPM "code".Isn't that cheating? 🤔
Perhaps when the news department stopped using teletype machines?The first time I DXed KNX in the 70's, they were using the teletype. No idea when they stopped.
How does random unidentified mechanical noise add a sense of immediacy? More like a sense of annoyance.My guess is most listeners won't associate it specifically with a teletype machine – how many listeners today have seen one? – but with a sense of immediacy, which is what a news station should suggest.
The Muppet Show was produced from 1976 to 1981 when most newsrooms still had teletype machines.If you grew up watching the Muppet Show as a kid, they used the sound of a teletype in their faux "news" segments.
Ponder, if you will, this 73-second clip of KZIA (1580) in Albuquerque in 1982 when it had a news/talk format. The noise in the background is, I believe, an Exel machine, which was a dot-matrix printer that UPI used in some installations in place of a standard teletype machine. The noise was faded out after about a minute.How does random unidentified mechanical noise add a sense of immediacy? More like a sense of annoyance.
drive.google.com
I'm too young to remember its initial run, but I do remember it from later reruns, specials, and home video releases. Disney+ has been streaming The Muppet Show since 2021.The Muppet Show was produced from 1976 to 1981 when most newsrooms still had teletype machines.
I was kind of kidding, but it does seem that stats should reflect listener preference and not technical tweaking.Why would that be cheating? All it does is enhance the chance of PPM detection in a talk based format where there are vastly fewer opportunities to insert the PPM "code".
The listener is there anyway. All the teletype sound may do is offer the PPM gear to encode more often, allowing for fuller credit for the station.I was kind of kidding, but it does seem that stats should reflect listener preference and not technical tweaking.
The PPM code is "masked" by music. The presence of audio is what allows the PPM "generator" to insert the coding. If there is no audio, there is nothing to mask the encoding, so n o ID bursts are inserted. There has to be audio for the PPM to work. The encoding is purposely buried under audio to mask it.BTW, how are there fewer opportunities to insert the PPM "code" in a talk format? I'd think it would be more likely to get buried in music. Just curious.
So very necessary that on the lousy sports talk network one of my clients has on the air, that takes tons of pregnant pauses, I constantly get encode alarms because you can't encode a flat line.The listener is there anyway. All the teletype sound may do is offer the PPM gear to encode more often, allowing for fuller credit for the station.
I know of at lest one sports broadcaster who has increased a bit the levels of crowd noise during live play by play for the same reason.
The PPM code is "masked" by music. The presence of audio is what allows the PPM "generator" to insert the coding. If there is no audio, there is nothing to mask the encoding, so n o ID bursts are inserted. There has to be audio for the PPM to work. The encoding is purposely buried under audio to mask it.
Just listened to a few minutes via the SDR. It sounds fine. My guess is most listeners won't associate it specifically with a teletype machine – how many listeners today have seen one? – but with a sense of immediacy, which is what a news station should suggest.
I listened to it just now on the SDR (from the other end of the country, the SF peninsula!). The teletype ticker is subtle, low in the mix, just the way it ought to be. If you mentally tune into it, you'll probably know what you're hearing. But for most of their listeners who, through choice or lack of alternative, still listen on 1010, it will be subtle enough to fade into the background noise and ignore.I made my sarcastic comment about antiquated technology near the beginning of this thread, but I actually agree with this takeaway. The average person outside of the media business probably doesn't know what a teletype machine even is, what it sounds like, or even what a modern newsroom sounds like.
As my username strongly suggests, I'm a longtime believer in the power of radio to create theater of the mind and that's what the sound effect in the background creates here. The listener doesn't need to know what the machine noise is or even consciously notice it, but subliminally it sounds like the steady flow of information and the activity of a busy newsroom in the background. Many TV newscasts do the same thing visually, showing their newsroom with staffers doing their work behind the scenes.
A lot of people associate the tap-tap-tap-tap background sound with 1010 WINS too. It was a strong part of the station's identity for decades and I'd argue that New Yorkers haven't forgotten it and that it can still serve that purpose.
But a talk based format isn't running dead air. Sure there are pauses, but it's attempting insertion 12 times a minute.There has to be audio for the PPM to work. The encoding is purposely buried under audio to mask it.
in the old days we'd have put it on a pot with a big sticker showing where the level should be. it would be faded down going into a stopset and back up coming out. am i showing my age?The teletype seems to be in the audio chain before any AGC/compression on the mic.
As far as a data burst that only takes a couple of seconds, it is. If the audio is not consistently there always, the PPM will not complete its coding.But a talk based format isn't running dead air.
And in casual speech, that may not give enough continuous audio for any insertion.Sure there are pauses, but it's attempting insertion 12 times a minute.
That is likely what they are attempting to find out. They can compare usage prior to the teletype with usage during this period and form a final decision.Is this really a problem for news-talkers getting accurate numbers?
The PPM offers full disclosure. If your station does not have dense enough audio, that is your problem. There is no way of "fixing" the encoding... it works adequately and Nielsen is expending it to other media, including TV.If so, why has there not been a fix, or a lawsuit?
wow. just wow.And in casual speech, that may not give enough continuous audio for any insertion.