7
700WLW
Guest
"Currency Converter"
1 U.K.£ = 1.9452 USD
http://finance.yahoo.com/currency?u
"Portable DAB receivers"
http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dabreceivers.html
"A look at DAB"
"Interference on DAB is different to the type of interference you'll notice on FM radio. Instead of hiss and crackle, the symptoms are digital breakup (like when your mobile phone starts to cut out), or a sort of warbling, sometimes likened to being underwater. For information on ways to improve your digital radio reception, take a look at the BBC Reception site. Other tips for improving reception include: using a good external aerial, keeping your radio away from electrical interference, and for internal radios, keeping them near a window, or with the aerial pointing the direction of the transmitter, as high up, and with as few walls in the way as possible. Still no luck? Perhaps try taking the radio to another location (friends house?) to try reception in a few other areas. For help handling problems where there's no reception... Another option, of course, is Internet radio."
http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dab.html
IF portable HD becomes a reality, and we use portable DAB receivers in the UK, as a bench-mark, the price of portable HD will never approach that of typical $10 - $25 portable analog AM/FM radios, and will be too expensive to sell in-mass - the cheapest portable/hand-held DAB radio is $70 USD. Looks like, reception is also an issue, and yes, digital radio behaves exaclty as digital cell phones. And, DAB is FM only.
1 U.K.£ = 1.9452 USD
http://finance.yahoo.com/currency?u
"Portable DAB receivers"
http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dabreceivers.html
"A look at DAB"
"Interference on DAB is different to the type of interference you'll notice on FM radio. Instead of hiss and crackle, the symptoms are digital breakup (like when your mobile phone starts to cut out), or a sort of warbling, sometimes likened to being underwater. For information on ways to improve your digital radio reception, take a look at the BBC Reception site. Other tips for improving reception include: using a good external aerial, keeping your radio away from electrical interference, and for internal radios, keeping them near a window, or with the aerial pointing the direction of the transmitter, as high up, and with as few walls in the way as possible. Still no luck? Perhaps try taking the radio to another location (friends house?) to try reception in a few other areas. For help handling problems where there's no reception... Another option, of course, is Internet radio."
http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/dab.html
IF portable HD becomes a reality, and we use portable DAB receivers in the UK, as a bench-mark, the price of portable HD will never approach that of typical $10 - $25 portable analog AM/FM radios, and will be too expensive to sell in-mass - the cheapest portable/hand-held DAB radio is $70 USD. Looks like, reception is also an issue, and yes, digital radio behaves exaclty as digital cell phones. And, DAB is FM only.