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Radio World

Inside the Feb. 5 Issue of Radio World

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Find out why John Bisset is excited about the Amprobe ULD-420. Read why Larry Langford is getting tied up in knots. Hear what Fred Jacobs learned when he went back over 15 years of Techsurvey data about how radio listeners use consumer technology. And check in on two separate LPFM operations with very different audiences and formats.

Read it online here.

Prefer to do your reading offline? No problem! Simply click on the Issuu link, go to the left corner and choose the download button to get a PDF version.

REGULATION
A Problem With FX Pretzel Patterns

In this commentary, a station owner (no, that’s not him in the photo) challenges the FCC to tighten up its regulations on exotic directional translators.

TECHNOLOGY
BBC Assesses 5G’s Broadcast Capability

The research and development arm of The Beeb tested live radio broadcasts over a purpose-designed 5G network to assess the capability of the technology to reach people living in rural areas.

 

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:
  • Workbench: A New Ultrasonic Leak Detector Pinpoints Leaks
  • MicPort Pro 2 Delivers the Smartphone Audio Goods
  • Small Station Finds It Needs More Space

The post Inside the Feb. 5 Issue of Radio World appeared first on Radio World.

Emily M. Reigart

Neogroupe’s GDPR-Compliant NeoScreener Goes Mobile

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

NeoGroupe’s NeoScreener is a set of call screening applications that allow screeners and hosts to be in different locations while sharing instant information on calls that are available for broadcast.

With the NeoGroupe smartphone/tablets application, the company says that one of its clients, for example, regularly screens calls in Washington D.C. while the host airs them in London.

The applications also offers full user control, even based on Active Directory if necessary. Thus, specific rights to studios and shows, action tracing, authentication and data encryption are now included.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

NeoScreener works with Telos VX and NX as well as AEQ Systel. It has a comprehensive winner, giveaway, promo and script companion module. It’s also now now fully GDPR compliant.

For information, contact NeoGroupe in France at +33-9-72-23-62-00 or visit www.neogroupe.com.

The post Neogroupe’s GDPR-Compliant NeoScreener Goes Mobile appeared first on Radio World.

Marguerite Clark

A Problem With FX Pretzel Patterns

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago
The author writes, “Pretzel patterns are becoming more and more common in metro areas where FX openings are tight.” Getty Images/Jen Pollack Bianco/EyeEm

 

The job of a consulting engineer is to do everything possible to maximize the facilities of a client within the constraints of FCC regulations, the laws of physics and the budget of the applicant.

In the case of a full-power FM that needs a directional antenna system, the FCC demands strict conditions before the License to Cover application is granted. 

These include detailed paperwork from the applicant showing the antenna was designed by a reputable manufacturer using a test range with full-size or modeled antennas that take into account the tower design, other antennas mounted to the tower, cables, conduits and anything else that could cause pattern distortion. 

The commission wants to see sketches, notes and test results from the maker of the antenna. It further requires you to use a licensed surveyor to certify that the antenna was mounted at the correct azimuth as called for by the manufacturer. Lastly the commission requires an affidavit from a qualified engineer that everything was done by the book and the resulting pattern is good based on a proof of performance. 

All of this can be required of the simplest of directional systems for full-power FMs.

CURIOUS PATTERNS

With consultants now being asked to shoe-horn translators into the tightest of places, we are seeing some rather curious antenna patterns in FX applications. Some stretch physics to the absolute limit! 

Again, understand, just because the consultant can specify a complex contour that requires a composite antenna design, it does not mean that the antenna company can make it happen for less than a king’s ransom. 

What is shocking is that for translator directionals, the FCC demands only a checkbox that promises that the antenna meets the required contours as shown in the CP. Talk about faith and trust. 

I will admit that for some “off-the-shelf” directionals and omni antennas that are side-mounted with a predictable pattern, just the antenna sheet and a promise that it was put up pointing the correct direction are probably enough. 

But let’s take the case of the antenna pattern granted on a Chicago translator. It is a real head-scratcher. Fig. 1 shows a pattern that is obviously protecting more than three co-channel translators and full-power FM stations. These pretzel patterns are becoming more and more common in metro areas where FX openings are tight. In this case, the CP application specifies a two-bay “penetrator” style antenna with parasitic elements to get this very complex and non-symmetrical pattern in both the horizontal and vertical planes. 

If this pattern can be done with this type antenna, it would take a lot of range testing and a big box of parasitics installed with great precision and care to pull it off. The price tag for that would be in the thousands. 

TEMPTATION TO CHEAT

I have seen more than a few installations that demand such complex antennas that are simply built with an omni and no attempt to follow the one-of-a-kind design in the app. The temptation to cheat here is just too great, and the results are a mess when there is an interference complaint and the commission relies on these sometimes fantasy patterns to be accurate. 

I cannot blame the consultants, they just show what needs to be done. And often the person signing the License to Cover app is just one of the owners just checking the box, with no idea as to what pattern they really have. The License to Cover app should require that an actual engineer certifies the installation.

There are other cases where the commission is just plain wrong by its own mistakes on issuing a license. I know of a Chicago-area translator with a detailed application on how the system would take care of second-adjacency interference by using a multi-bay antenna to attenuate downward signal. The details were part of a waiver request. But when they put in the License to Cover application they specified a single-bay omni … and guess what? The commission granted the license anyway. Obviously this one slipped through the cracks. 

With AM it’s pretty easy to check on a directional antenna system, just drag out the Potomac and find the monitor points. But trying to do a field proof on a 250 watt translator DA with a meter to check on an installation after the fact will drive you crazy and tell you very little, especially if the antenna is mounted in close proximity to other antennas.  

[Is the FCC Dropping the Ball on Directional Translators?]

The FCC must tighten up regulations to make sure these exotic patterns drawn to get a CP are in fact built to get the License to Cover. 

Since the commission requires detailed proof that a directional was actually built and installed correctly for a commercial FM, why not at least some documentation that shows that a composite directional FX antenna for the requested CP was actually built and tested on a range with proper proof of performance? 

The commission would never accept the “word” of an AM operator that his multi-tower array was good without paperwork, so why allow translators to be put in with these very difficult patterns on just a wink and a promise that there is no cheating? 

While some old and outdated rules are being tossed out, here is one that needs to be revised for more, not less, paperwork. 

 Larry Langford is the owner of WGTO(AM) in Cassopolis, Mich. and W246DV, South Bend, Ind. His opinions on AM radio and other issues are a recurring feature in Radio World. 

Comment on this or any story to radioworld@futurenet.com with “Letter to the Editor” in the subject field. 

The post A Problem With FX Pretzel Patterns appeared first on Radio World.

Larry Langford

Radio World Webcast to Explore “Digital Sunrise for AM Radio” 

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Discussion of all-digital on the AM band has moved from the theoretical to the real with the recent announcement that the FCC tentatively plans to allow U.S. AM band stations to turn off their analog and broadcast in all-digital HD Radio.

Radio World is hosting a webcast Feb. 19 to explore the potential benefits, challenges and costs of such a transition. 

Whether you’ve been following developments closely or you are new to the idea, “Digital Sunrise for AM Radio” will help prepare attendees for what’s next. The content is intended not just for engineers, but also for owners and managers.

Editor in Chief Paul McLane interviewed Hubbard Radio’s Joel Oxley and Dave Kolesar, NAB’s David Layer, Xperi’s Mike Raide, DRM’s Ruxandra Obreja and Bryan Broadcasting’s Ben Downs. 

[Dates Set for Comments on Digital AM Proposal]

He asked: What would it cost to convert a station? What are the interference implications? What kind of user experience will listeners have? What important lessons can be learned from the only station so far to operate in all-digital full-time? What are the coverage and interference considerations that experts are exploring? How many stations might switch, and when? 

Learn more about the webinar and the featured speakers via the registration page.

The post Radio World Webcast to Explore “Digital Sunrise for AM Radio”  appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Twins Pair Up With Skyview Networks

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

From Radio World’s Who’s Buying What page:

The Minnesota Twins have drafted Skyview Networks’ AdView inventory management and live read capture software for a multi-year contract effective in March. 

The Minneapolis-based Major League Baseball team will deploy the customized software in order to schedule and report ads via its broadcast team and front office.

According to Minnesota Twins Senior Broadcast Manager Andrew Halverson, quoted in a press release, the new system will create “efficiencies in our reporting processes.”

Among other features, AdView’s Player Controller enables the Twins’ board operator to pair audio files with the current game scenario, even as the software can be used to schedule ads for the season. It also provides assurance that inventory is maximized and offers live read capture for proof of performance. AdView’s online catalog sorts ads by advertiser, date and time for quick downloads and simplified billing, according to Skyview.

Send news for Who’s Buying What to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Twins Pair Up With Skyview Networks appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Sprockit Reveals First Group of Startups for 2020 NAB Show

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Ten startups have been tapped as the first batch of companies that will participate in Sprockit’s program at the 2020 NAB Show.

Sprockit is a global marketplace that aims to help connect top startups and Fortune 500 companies in media, entertainment and technology. As part of the 2020 edition of Sprockit, the selected companies will exhibit at the 2020 NAB Show in the Sprockit Pavilion, located in the North Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Here are the first 10 announced startups:

  • Bellwethr – Automates the ideal customer experience throughout the customer lifecycle (Kansas City, MO)
  • Bixy – Improves monetization for publishers by leveraging consumer-controlled, opt-in data to power ad campaigns, email marketing, eCommerce and more (Kansas City, MO)
  • Chartbeat – Empowers content creators to build loyal audiences with real-time and historical analytics across desktop, mobile, and social platforms (New York)
  • Cross Screen Media – Offers marketing analytics and software solutions to build the next generation convergent TV platform (Alexandria, Va.)
  • Envision – Analyzes image and video content to automatize video curation and editing (Montreal, Canada)
  • ignifai – Provides a video analysis platform that uses AI technology to maximize content exposure, increase monetization and optimize production workflows (Paris)
  • nēdl – Solves the content discovery problem for audio creators with Real-Time Transcription Search and a unique end-to-end distribution platform (Santa Monica, Calif.)
  • Never.no – Makes TV interactive and advertising dynamic, helping broadcasters, advertisers and producers personalize content, increase audiences, engage viewers and grow revenues (Manchester, England)
  • Tetavi – Perfects volumetric capture for immersive media enabling faster, accurate and portable XR, film and gaming productions (Tel Aviv, Israel)
  • ZenSports – Allows anyone to create and accept sports bets with anyone else in the world, without the need for a centralized bookmaker (San Francisco)

In addition to presenting at the NAB Show, Sprockit participants are able to join in Sprockit Sync private network meetings that take place throughout the year. These Sync meetings include industry executives and Sprockit corporate partners, like Comcast, Fox, Google, Hearst Television, Public Media Venture Group, Samsung NEXT, Univision and Verizon.

Since its founding in 2013, Sprockit says that it has helped raise more than $1 billion in funding for its startups.

The application window for interested startups is still open, with the deadline to apply to participate in the 2020 NAB Show set for March 1. Applications can be completed online.

The 2020 NAB Show takes place from April 18-22 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. For more information, visit www.nabshow.com.

The post Sprockit Reveals First Group of Startups for 2020 NAB Show appeared first on Radio World.

Michael Balderston

DAB+ Progress in France and Beyond

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

The author is WorldDAB France representative

Jean-Marc Dubreuil

PARIS — Held in Paris at the end of January, the European Radio and Digital Audio Show brought together stakeholders from across the French radio industry and beyond to discuss the future of radio in France, Europe and around the world. It also served as a platform to highlight the opportunities DAB+ digital radio brings for the radio, manufacturing, retail and automotive sectors.

NEW ROADMAP

During a session dedicated to the development of DAB+ in France, Nicolas Curien from French regulator Conseil supérieur de l’audiovisuel joined me on stage. As did representatives from commercial and community radio, GfK and public service broadcaster Radio France.

The WorldDAB booth at the European Digital Radio and Audio Show featured a wide range of DAB+ receivers.

Together we outlined the progress of DAB+ digital radio throughout Europe and elsewhere, and touched on the EECC directive, the EU regulation that mandates digital radio in cars across Europe from Dec. 21, 2020, which has already been transposed into national legislation in a number of countries, including France.

On a national level, the CSA, published a new DAB+ roadmap highlighting DAB+ developments plans for the 2020–2023 period. According to the new roadmap, calls for applications will be launched for 50 local allotments in that period of time — these primarily concern the cities of Dijon, Lyon, Marseille, Rennes, Caen, Nancy, Paris, Bordeaux, Clermont-Ferrand, Poitiers and Toulouse.

[U.K. Government Restates Support for Digital Radio]

As for France’s national multiplexes, a call for applications will be launched for the remaining spot available on Mux 1, while the last spot on Mux 2 will be dedicated to data broadcasting services such as traffic information.

The CSA’s newly launched DAB+ interactive map.

As outlined by the CSA, DAB+ experimentation and trials may take place in France’s overseas territories in coming years, though this will largely depend on interest expressed by local players.

At the show, the French media regulator also announced the launch of a new interactive map giving listeners the opportunity to see what DAB+ services are available in their respective areas. The service, available here, also includes planned DAB+ rollouts across France.

IN-DASH ADVANCES

Industry professionals also widely discussed the future of radio in the car during the three-day event, with the likes of Audi, Radioplayer, RadioDNS, Xperi, Radioline and TDF in attendance to voice their opinions on hybrid radio. The solutions to access metadata exist, and it is up to the radios and receiver manufacturers to make the most of them.

Ultimately, the goal is to access quality, reliable and affordable information in order to provide an improved experience for users, and according to Audi and other innovative players, having one single standard that is used globally will most definitely help achieve that.

The post DAB+ Progress in France and Beyond appeared first on Radio World.

Jean-Marc Dubreuil

Rush Limbaugh Announces Cancer Diagnosis

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Talk radio kingpin Rush Limbaugh made a surprise announcement today to his audience — he has “advanced” lung cancer and will be stepping away for treatments.

News rapidly spread across the media.

Here is the announcement:

http://www.radioworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Rush-Cancer-Announcement.mp3

 

 

More can be found at this sampling here:

Rush Limbaugh’s Shocking Cancer Diagnosis Spurs Support, Well Wishes (Fox News)

Rush Limbaugh Says He Has Advanced Lung Cancer, Will Continue Radio Program While He Undergoes Treatment (Washington Post)

Talk-Radio Host Rush Limbaugh Says He Has Advanced Lung Cancer (Bloomberg)

 

The post Rush Limbaugh Announces Cancer Diagnosis appeared first on Radio World.

Brett Moss

Audio Experiment

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Today Rush Limbaugh announced he has cancer.

http://www.radioworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Rush-Cancer-Announcement.mp3

 

The post Audio Experiment appeared first on Radio World.

Brett Moss

Delta Meccanica Introduces Star Point Combiner

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

ORVIETO, Italy — Delta Meccanica has developed the Star Point combiner, which is capable of combining six medium- or high-power frequencies.

Previously the company offered combiners able to associate six frequencies for powers limited to 2 kW per transmitter.

Combining greater powers (i.e. 6 x 5 kW and 6 x 10 kW), the company says, is more challenging due to the size of the filters. “But the design flexibility of our cavities allowed us to design and create — with only slight configuration tweaks — a device capable of providing optimal RF performance in a cost effective way.”

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

The firm adds that due to the above development, it no longer needed to design a “manifold” combiner, a configuration that it considers no longer valid for FM.

Delta Meccanica is also studying the possibility of implementing a compact version of the Star Point combiner.

 For information, contact Delta Meccanica in Italy at +39-07-6331-6222 or visit www.deltameccanica.com.

The post Delta Meccanica Introduces Star Point Combiner appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Community Broadcaster: The End of Jazz

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

The author is membership program director of the National Federation of Community Broadcasters. NFCB commentaries are featured regularly at www.radioworld.com.

One of my favorite memories as a student was discovering John Coltrane. Like generations before mine, I was dazzled by his virtuoso stylings on “My Favorite Things.” Tales of his all-night jam sessions and one-of-a-kind life were bits of music history likely to never be repeated. Just as his jazz contemporaries blazed bold trails, so Coltrane too proved to be a standard bearer. He, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis and others undoubtedly have introduced many people to the timeless sound of jazz.

However, every classic song comes to a close. And there is more than a little indication that jazz’s days on radio are numbered.

Jazz has seen such a turn of events since it ruled commercial radio in the 1940s into the 1950s. But by the mid-1950s, popular music tastes changed. Even with the rise of The Beatles, Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley, though, jazz enjoyed a sizable audience. Offshoots such as New Age music and smooth jazz kept the genre in the public consciousness just a few years ago. However, with its core audience aging and longtime jazz radio pioneers exploring other avenues, one has to openly ask how much longer noncommercial media will continue to lift up the genre.

[Read: Community Broadcaster: Plant a Seed]

Although the news is not pointing to mass extinction just yet, indications are jazz on the tower is facing some challenges. Recently, Current highlighted the situation at veteran jazz outlet WUMR, which will be departing its 40-year history of jazz radio in favor of a mixed format. In 2018, three jazz stations — KUVO in Denver and Historically Black College and University licensees KPVU and WNSB — were approved to continue the urban alternative effort supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The new format gives stations at chance to connect with new audiences with R&B and hip-hop, though ostensibly their traditional jazz offerings will be (or are being) impacted, now and into the future.

While jazz education groups will tell you there is a growing younger demographic very interested in jazz, I can’t find anyone who says the public perception is one in which jazz is a young person’s primary musical choice. With pressures to increase listenership and grow the donor base, managers at public and community stations are thus going to find little traction with boards of directors or other stakeholders in favor of making jazz a centerpiece of programming. Without champions to expose new listeners to jazz, it is hard to say what jazz will be to broadcast in 20 years. The future does not look promising.

This is not to criticize the value of jazz to the nation, nor does this commentary impinge on any music genre largely vanished from commercial and noncommercial radio. Change is not anyone’s fault. If anything, the gradual disappearing of jazz radio may be the clarion call for its most ardent supporters to think creatively about community engagement and jazz education writ large.

WNCU is one of several jazz stations involved in educating students about jazz and the importance of these stations to their communities and to music history. KDHX is famed for its Folk School, where musical lessons introduce new generations to appreciate folk and bluegrass. Indubitably, a station could do the same with jazz.

Then, of course, there are the dozens of community radio jazz shows that bring you old and new music in the genre. These endeavors are wonderful. Whether that will be enough to save jazz from radio silence may be left to history.

The post Community Broadcaster: The End of Jazz appeared first on Radio World.

Ernesto Aguilar

NPR Says LPTV Stations Are ‘Misusing’ FM Radio Services

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Insinuating a connection between Dr. Frankenstein’s monster, National Public Radio wants to see an end to low-power television Channel 6 stations using analog FM radio services and has asked the FCC to refuse future authorization of such use of what it calls “Franken FM” stations.

NPR filed its comments in response to the FCC Media Bureau’s request for feedback on whether analog LPTV stations should be able to continue to program an analog radio service—available on the FM dial (87.7)—after the final digital television conversion deadline.

NPR says that LPTVs’ use of radio airwaves can occupy 30x the spectrum a traditional FM station would use and would cause problems if permitted to continue to operate on analog.

“Franken FMs pose an ongoing threat of harmful interference to public radio stations operating in the immediately adjacent FM band reserved for noncommercial educational broadcast stations,” NPR’s comments to the FCC read. “Moreover, the grossly inefficient use of spectrum adjacent to the NCE reserved FM band ultimate prevents public radio stations from expanding their signal coverage or otherwise offering a multiplicity of additional public service programming for the American public.”

[Background: Media Bureau Continues FM6 Update Inquiry]

LPTVs believe that these concerns are exaggerated.

“There [are] currently over 20 LPTV stations transmitting analog audio carriers available on 87.7 FM, yet the LPTV-C is not aware of any outstanding (not resolved to satisfaction of the listener) complaints about actual interference between the audio signal transmitted by these analog LPTV stations and nearby FM stations on Channels 201 or 202,” the group told the FCC. “However, if the commission chooses to be overly cautious, it can adopt both contour overlap restrictions and prohibitions on actual interference that would eliminate any theoretical risk of interference between 87.7 FM audio carrier and nearby NCE FM stations. In everyday, real-world operating conditions, the current or proposed expanded 87.7 FM services will not cause impermissible interference to other broadcast licensees in their markets.”

LPTVs also have argued that their stations benefit unserved or under-served audiences, though NPR counters that these stations typically offer country, contemporary, Spanish language, religious and sports programming, areas that it says are well served by FM radio stations.

This can all be traced back to the digital conversion of 2009. At that time, full power stations were required to go all digital, but the FCC allowed LPTVs to continue to broadcast in analog until 12 months after the completion of the post-incentive auction repack. The auction is currently scheduled to be completed on July 3, 2020, giving LPTVs until July 3, 2021, to switch completely to digital.

[Is There an Afterlife for Franken FMs?]

NPR, in its argument, says that its position of ending operation of Franken FMs is supported by the Communications Act, FCC regulations and federal communications and spectrum policy. If LPTVs were allowed to continue Franken FM operations, “[the FCC] would have to develop additional rules to govern these Franken FM services to avoid interference to adjacent reserved band NCE FM stations and to assure reception of the LPTV’s primary video service by DTV receivers.”

NPR concludes the commission would better serve the public by reaffirming the DTV conversion deadline.

The post NPR Says LPTV Stations Are ‘Misusing’ FM Radio Services appeared first on Radio World.

Michael Balderston

PILOT’s Tech Internship Grants Open To Interested Stations

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

NAB’s PILOT wants to help broadcasters help students forward their careers in radio and television engineering this summer via its technology internship grant program, announcing that it is now accepting applications to help create paid internships.

The summer 2020 technology internship grant program is open to NAB member radio and television stations. Accepted stations will be assisted in establishing paid engineering or media-technology internships for undergraduate students at stations that do not have such resources, particularly in smaller markets.

The program also provides resources for the selected stations in identifying and supporting interns. This includes travel assistance for selected interns to attend the 2020 NAB Show in Las Vegas.

The deadline for NAB members to submit applications for the grants is Feb. 21. Selected stations will be notified in March 2020.

For more information, visit www.nabpilot.org/techinterns.

The post PILOT’s Tech Internship Grants Open To Interested Stations appeared first on Radio World.

Michael Balderston

iHeart Defends Painful Change

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Recriminations and speculation are two words of the day as we in the radio trades, as well as the nation’s media at large, get our minds around the scale of iHeartMedia’s “transformation” this month.

Cleveland.com has a lengthy article that captures many of the gut-wrenched reactions that people in radio have had. The iHeart announcement “felt different” to industry observers, “like a seismic shift, raising an alarm that perhaps, this time, radio as we know has passed the point of no return,” it reported.

The author of that article believes the number of layoffs was about 1,500; other estimates have been around 1,000. There’s been no confirmed total reported by the company; various counts make it clear there have been at least many hundred people put out of work. (Many reported cuts have been on the programming side; among the unanswered questions are how many engineers and technical positions were affected.)

Cleveland.com lists the familiar challenges to radio including the popularity of streaming and the habits of younger listeners, but also comments on radio’s resiliency over time and its ongoing large overall number of listeners. It notes that Sen. Sherrod Brown has written to iHeart questioning the layoffs in the face of large compensation packages to company executives.

[Read about the technology strategy underpinning iHeart’s “transformation”]

The article summarizes fears that iHeart will use automation and artificial intelligence to run its operations as “a radio station in a closet.” This is a longtime worry of supporters of localism who saw elimination of the main studio rule as removing a regulatory bulwark, allowing operation by “only a few people on the ground and a room full of hard drives,” or even just a tiny sales office with a sign on the door in a community. Cleveland.com quotes longtime radio observer and industry critic Jerry Del Colliano speculating: “You go into a Cleveland radio station, there won’t be any studios. They could be at a WeWork location.”

The company pushed back in a statement to Cleveland.com: “The most important responsibility we have is to the communities we serve. We will continue to serve every local community in which we operate just as we always have.”

But that article ends with speculation that where iHeart goes, others will follow. Del Colliano gloomily said, “This is the end of local radio as we know it.”

A NECESSARY PIVOT?

The Washington Post followed with a writeup of its own with a headline that iHeart “said its mass ‘employee dislocation’ was necessary as it pivoted to AI. But others say it’s the company’s human leaders who deserve the blame.”

This article focused in part on the human impact but summarizes the business rationale this way: “The dominant player in U.S. radio, which owns the online music service iHeartRadio and more than 850 local stations across the United States, has called AI the muscle it needs to fend off rivals, recapture listeners and emerge from bankruptcy. The company, which now uses software to schedule music, analyze research and mix songs, plans to consolidate offices around what executives call ‘AI-enabled Centers of Excellence,” the Post reported. “The company’s shift seems in line with a corporate America that is increasingly embracing automation, using technological advances to take over tasks once done by people, boosting profits and cutting costs. The workplace transformation is typically reduced to a symbol: a robot stealing a human’s job.”

The Post quoted iHeartRadio spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg saying the cuts showed how iHeartMedia was shifting “jobs to the future from the past,” adding data analysts, podcast staff and other digital teams to help transform the company into a “multiplatform” creator and “America’s #1 audio company.” She told the Post: “We do not intend to be one of those companies that stayed in the past, and the world passed it by. Change is painful and change is hard — but consciously choosing not to change is not an option for a company that is going to continue to grow and compete.”

Radio World has renewed its request to iHeartMedia for interviews with company executives about its announcement and will report any outcomes. The company declined to comment to RW earlier.

Also worthy of a fresh read is this 2018 interview with iHeart’s Chris Williams, which touched on the themes of artificial intelligence and what iHeart was planning to do with it.

The post iHeart Defends Painful Change appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Reader Letters on C. Crane, Modulation, EAS Costs

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

WHERE’S THE DIGITAL?

 

Good article about a good radio (“C. Crane Offers Up a Premium Portable,” Dec. 18, 2019 issue). But why doesn’t the new CCRadio-EP receive HD channels? The good journalists at Radio World should have at least asked “Why not HD?”

I realize station managers and sales reps see no profit in HD Radio, but that is the same thing they said about FM in the 1950s. Some even tried to kill FM because they didn’t think people would buy it. Smart stations persisted in marketing FM. Those that stuck with FM eventually had the last word.

It is a “chicken or egg” thing with HD Radio and receivers. People aren’t interested in HD because stations don’t promote it and receivers are not available. I would have been a lot more excited about this new radio if it was future-proofed and promoted HD Radio.

Kevin Ruppert
Madison, Wis.

 

CORRECTING A DISTORTION

I found Mark Persons’ article “Find Your Modulation Sweet Spot” (RW, Oct. 9, 2019 issue) very informative and helpful. Distortion is a turn-off. And I had never considered the distortion inherent in the garden-variety AM envelope detector in the home receiver. Shame on me. Hopefully, this will lead to better-sounding AM.

One nit to pick: The peak power for a 100% modulated AM signal is four times carrier power, not 1.5 times as stated in the article.

James K. Thorusen
Chief Engineer
Central Coast Electronics
Lincoln City, Ore.

Mark Persons replies: Average power is what I was thinking of when writing the article. Mr. Thorusen is correct in saying that peak power is four times unmodulated power.

 

EAS HOSTAGE?

Once again we have a great example of how unreliably the EAS system is implemented. At least one major supplier of equipment recently sent out emails requiring all stations to upgrade software within a week or be unable to run the system. On top of that, in what feels like an extortion scheme, they required each station, including LPFMs and small markets that are barely getting by, to just find $350 from somewhere.

The units cost a considerable amount, and I think it is obscene to hold the users of this product hostage for software upgrades, I thought that was the reason it cost so much to buy.

I still maintain that if we want a truly functional emergency system we need to revisit the entire system in light of technology developments over the past years since the EAS was designed, and replace EAS with a more robust system that has hardware and software supplied and managed by the FCC.

This kind of haphazard process amplifies the obvious failings of EAS, it is unworkable, and cannot be made workable.

Michael Baldauf

 

LONG LIVE RADIO

I respectfully disagree with the person who wrote that radio is dead.

Having spent much of my career in electronic media, I fully understand how radio, TV, satellites, the internet, etc. all fit together to give us a remarkably flexible means of disseminating information.

Sitting here in my home office at my computer, I can “dial up” radio stations from all over the country (and the world). For example, I can listen to a station 900 miles away in my hometown. Five or ten minutes listening on my computer gets me up to speed on the late-breaking news from “back” home. If there is something really interesting, I can pick up the telephone on my desk and “connect” with someone involved in the story. If I am away from home, I can do the same thing on my laptop.

If the story is really “hot” I can pick up my cellphone and get connected to a real live human being who is involved in the story, regardless of where I am.

Long live radio! The “sound” medium.

Lewis D. Collins
Peabody, Mass.

The post Reader Letters on C. Crane, Modulation, EAS Costs appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Trends in Virtualization & the Cloud

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

In what areas are virtualization affecting radio as we move into 2020? How might these trends change the future infrastructure model for radio in the U.S. and elsewhere?

The newest Radio World ebook explores the topic. In this ebook, brought to you by Wheatstone, ENCO and RCS, veteran engineer Doug Irwin asks technology suppliers and others about virtualization in audio management, production and playout, processing and more, with an emphasis on developments of the past 12-18 months.

To what extent is a cloud-based infrastructure the model of the future for radio media companies? Does the elimination of the main studio rule mean that studios will go away?

What are the technical issues and concerns that are raised by the idea of cloud-based infrastructure? Can the cloud approach be “extended” to a location of the broadcasters’ choosing? What else should broadcasters know today about where these technologies are headed, to be prepared?

Read the new ebook here.

The post Trends in Virtualization & the Cloud appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

iHeart’s Tech Strategy Puts Spotlight on “Super Hi-Fi”

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Among the technical tools apparently being used by iHeartMedia in its dramatic organizational restructure is a music-mixing A.I. system built by Super Hi-Fi.

It’s being reported on today by the Washington Post and was described in some detail in an earlier Radio World interview with iHeart’s chief product officer. It’s not clear the extent to which Super Hi-Fi is at the core of iHeart’s AI, given that company officials are declining to talk about such specifics, but it seems likely to be a central component given that Super Hi-Fi was being tried out in its streaming platform.

The Post reports: “The system can transition in real time between songs by layering in music, sound effects, voice-over snippets and ads, delivering the style of smooth, seamless playback that has long been the human DJ’s trade. The Los Angeles-based Super Hi-Fi, whose clients also include the streaming fitness service Peloton, says its ‘computational music presentation’ AI can help erase the seconds-long gaps between songs that can lead to ‘a loss of energy, lack of continuity and disquieting sterility’.”

The Post described patents that it says “reduce the art of mixing music to a diagram of algorithmic tasks,” including a system called MagicStitch that assesses songs’ technical characteristics, blends songs and interjects other elements. The reporter describes a demo given by the company and points out a comment by iHeart’s chief product officer, Chris Williams, in an interview by Radio World that “virtual DJs” that could seamlessly interweave chatter, music and ads were “absolutely” coming, and “something we are always thinking about.”

“PERFECT TRANSITIONS”

This caused us to take a fresh look at that 2018 Radio World interview.

Super Hi-Fi describes itself as a company “dedicated to the creation of powerful artificial intelligence tools to help digital music services deliver amazing listening experiences.” In the earlier story, Williams described how Super Hi-Fi would add “perfect transitions,” “sonic leveling” and “gapless playback.”

Williams described the technology at the time as applied to iHeartRadio streams rather than over-the-air broadcasts, but the conversation presaged the impact on the latter.

[Read the 2018 interview with Chris Williams.]

“We’re eliminating the periods of silence that users currently experience within streaming music to create an experience that mimics the polished production of live radio,” Williams told RW at the time. “We’ve audited the user experience across all the major services and the average gap is 4-6 seconds between the end of one song and the start of another.”

He said the perception of the gap can be even longer across songs with really long, quiet fades or silence at the end. “This new A.I. takes all this into consideration to create the perfect song transitions just as a seasoned radio programmer or DJ would do.”

The technology also levels the volume across songs from different decades, he said at the time.

“This is important because music plays a role in setting a mood and amplifying an experience. Silence between every song and jarring changes in volume breaks the spell and takes a user out of the flow of their experience. It’s an unwelcome disruption that we can eliminate so that the music does what we intend it to do — enhance the moment.”

Williams said in the 2018 interview that these are not cross fade or segue tones, traditional methods the industry uses to solve a transition problem. “Our solution considers every transition discretely, analyzing the song ending as well as the song playing next,” he told RW. “The transition point for a single song is going to vary depending on what track is following, it is dynamic for each unique transition. Our transitions factor in energy, tempo, instrumentation, vocals, processing, volume, production values and hundreds of other attributes for one transition on the fly.

[Related: “Is Artificial Intelligence Friend or Foe to Radio?” Sept. 2018]

“Each time a new song is ingested, the A.I. learns the characteristics of that track and how to best transition it with every other song in the library, similar to the masterful capabilities of our on-air programmers.”

Williams said there are two parts of programming that affect the user experience and have to be considered: curation and presentation. “The curation, or song selection, is still based on our custom algorithm, which is influenced by the curation expertise of our world-class radio programmers. The presentation, or how the songs are stitched together, is what’s being enhanced using the Super Hi-Fi A.I.”

But asked how “artificial intelligence” could be used in a radio operation, he replied: “For a streaming music service, it allows us to scale this concept across millions of songs and billions of unique transitions in a way that isn’t possible if it had to be done by hand,” Williams said. For radio, “We would have to resort to one of the static solutions versus the dynamic approach that we have adopted.”

Notably, Radio World asked Williams, “Do you envision a day when iHeartRadio streams will have virtual DJs, complete with Casey Kasem/Gary Owens voices delivering chatter, tidbits about the song/artist or even local weather before the song plays?”

He answered, “Absolutely. Being able to add in personality, branding, artist messages and weave them all together with the music in a way that is seamless and respects the music is something we are always thinking about.”

CENTERS OF EXCELLENCE

This week’s Washington Post article quotes the co-founder of Super Hi-Fi, Zack Zalon, saying its system won’t trigger massive job cuts and could lead to new opportunities, but also said he expects that, in a few years, computer-generated voices could read off news, serve interviews and introduce songs.

We note, too, that Super Hi-Fi was not mentioned by name in the recent iHeart announcement, which described “technology- and AI-enabled Centers of Excellence” that consolidate functional areas of expertise “in specific locations to deliver the highest quality products and services.” It did mention “the hundreds of millions of dollars in investment [iHeart] has made in building out the company’s core infrastructure, in addition to strategic technology and platform acquisitions like Jelli, RadioJar and Stuff Media.”

Meanwhile, iHeart spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg was quoted by the Post this week saying that its technical solutions allow the company to free up programming people for more creative pursuits, “embedding our radio stations into the communities and lives of our listeners better and deeper than they have been before.”

The post iHeart’s Tech Strategy Puts Spotlight on “Super Hi-Fi” appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

AudioScience Adds Livewire+ AES67 to Iyo Dante

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago
AudioScience Iyo Dante

Audio interface developer AudioScience has announced that its Iyo Dante line of interfaces now supports the Livewire+ AES67 audio over IP protocol.

Most Livewire+ AES67 devices can stream audio to and from an Iyo Dante interface including Axia Livewire+-enabled consoles and mix engines using the Livewire low-latency streaming format.

Because it supports the Livewire+ AES67 discovery and routing protocols the Iyo Dante and its Livewire+ AES67-compatible streams can be discovered and connected using Telos Pathfinder Core Pro VM/appliance or the legacy PathfinderPro software.

[What is AES67? Andreas Hillebrand explains.]

AudioScience President Richard Gross said, “The Iyo Dante Livewire+ endpoints have been developed as a direct response to increased Axia compatibility requests from AudioScience’s long-standing radio station audio card user base. The combination of the Telos/Axia open architecture platform with AudioScience’s technical expertise has helped us provide both a cost-effective and superior density solution in a 1RU.”

AudioScience has prepared instructions for making the best of the new feature.

Info: www.audioscience.com

The post AudioScience Adds Livewire+ AES67 to Iyo Dante appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Pilot Announces Winners of the 2020 Innovation Challenge

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Pilot, NAB’s technology innovation initiative, announced the winners of its fourth annual Pilot Innovation Challenge. The program will provide support to the winners to develop an AI prototype for Pilot in order to enhance broadcasters’ audience engagement.

Individuals, teams, companies, academic institutions and nonprofit organizations submitted concepts to address the challenge prompt to “build an AI character that can have conversations with individual viewers, listeners or consumers.”

This year’s winners are:

  • DeepTalk: A Conversational Agent for Broadcasters — Michigan State University: NextGen Media Innovation Lab, College of Communication Arts and Sciences; i-PRoBe Lab, Department of Computer Science and Engineering; WKAR Public Media. DeepTalk is a conversational agent, like Siri, that can be trained through deep learning to deliver news in the voice of a local broadcaster.
  • Jukebot — University of Minnesota: Department of Computer Science and Engineering. Jukebot is a chatbot API capable of answering simple questions and getting feedback from users for music stations.

Pilot is allocating a total of $150,000 between the two winners. Winners will also receive relevant mentorship, feedback during development and a trip to the 2020 NAB Show to demonstrate their prototype.

Innovation Challenge finalists included:

  • AI-Driven Interactive News on Mobile Devices — Embody Digital
  • Leveraging Conversational AI to Grow Audience, Deepen Engagement and Shape Content Strategy — University of Georgia: Department of Statistics, Institute for Artificial Intelligence; Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication New Media Institute
  • Kuralt.AI: 3D Broadcast Avatar — University of North Carolina: Reese News Lab, Hussman School of Journalism and Media

Pilot Executive Director John Clark said NAB looks forward to working with the winners to develop their prototypes and ultimately provide broadcasters the ability to better serve their communities through AI.

 

The post Pilot Announces Winners of the 2020 Innovation Challenge appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

AM in Digital? It’s a Tech Solution to the Wrong Problem

Radio World
5 years 4 months ago

Dear Editor,

Scott Dorsey writes, “It is time for some weeding out, so that stations that can take advantage of the actual advantages of AM are able to do so.”

Dave Kolesar sees digital transmission as the salvation of the AM band (Dec. 4, 2019 issue), but AM problems are more social than technical. There are perhaps 20 times as many AM stations as there were in the 1950s, but far fewer listeners. Receivers haven’t improved; in fact on the whole they have got worse. Much of the problem is sheer overcrowding.

The one major benefit of AM, where AM shines over all other possible delivery methods, is long-distance reception over skip and the ability to deal with severe multipath on rugged terrain. Any digital system for AM broadcast that cannot contend with skip reception or degrades reception in mountainous areas is destroying the one advantage that AM has.

Yes, it’s possible that IBOC MA3 is a great improvement over MA1, in that MA1 not only was inaudible over skip but made adjacent-channel stations unlistenable. MA3 is much less likely to destroy reception of distant stations, but the digital carrier is still destroyed by Faraday rotation.

If your station is not audible on skip, and you’re not in a mountainous area where FM is problematic, you probably shouldn’t be on the AM band. I know a lot of AM stations realize this and would like to move to the FM band but cannot. The FM band is too crowded too.

But we need to sit down and face the real truth that there are too many stations on the AM band broadcasting junk programming that people are not actively listening to. It is time for some weeding out, so that stations that can take advantage of the actual advantages of AM are able to do so.

The NAB doesn’t want to talk about this. The FCC doesn’t want to talk about this. All anybody wants to do is promote technical solutions to the wrong problem.

I would be strongly in favor of digital systems that were able to cope with skip transmission, such as DRM. But there’s an easy way to dramatically improve listenability of the band, it’s just that nobody wants to talk about it.

Scott Dorsey
Kludge Audio
Williamsburg, Va.

The post AM in Digital? It’s a Tech Solution to the Wrong Problem appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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