Originally posted by johnb
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Goodbye to HD Radio (for the moment)
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The changes shouldn't affect the on-demand (i.e. listen again) accessed via the BBC Website, just as last weeks changes to live streaming didn't affect the live streaming on the BBC Website.
However, for on-demand accessed in other ways (e.g. internet radios, audio streamers, computer media players) all we know is that there will be no WMA streams and that the BBC are providing on-demand HLS/HDS streams (which few devices outside the Apple world support). Nobody knows whether the existing on demand AAC streams (currently used by internet radios, audio streamers, etc) will stop because the BBC refuses to say.
Last year, when the BBC told manufacturers of their planned changes to live internet radio feeds (which came into effect last week) they announced that WMA streams would end and that they would be providing live HLS/HDS streams. What they apparently did not tell the manufacturers was that the existing AAC streams would stop - which is the reason the manufacturers were caught on the hop and is the reason why there are currently hardly any devices capable of playing the new HLS/HDS streams (the Squeezebox and a few Pure devices excepted).
So, if the BBC is true to form it is likely that the current AAC on-demand internet streams will stop at the end of the month and be replaced by HLS/HDS which very few people can access.
Once again, if you access on-demand via the BBC Website you should be OK.
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Nevalti
FM still works. Thank God they didn't turn that off or there would probably have been a licence strike. First they drive people to Internet Radio because DAB is so awful and then they make pathetically ill-planned changes that are probably going to render expensive equipment redundant - yet they are not prepared to upgrade the awful DAB - because it will make old DAB radios redundant. Where is the logic?
On the plus side, the new R3 320 kbs AAC stream SEEMS to me to be better than it was before. I have no way of measuring it, I am just judging with my ears and my memory - which may of course be flawed.
The R3 stream given on the R3 web-site obviously works well for me what are the 320kbs URLs for the other BBC stations? Has anyone found them?
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Nevalti
Thank you John. I have tried those in JRiver and MediaMonkey but both report, "There is nothing to play" for every station. Does that simply mean they are not currently streaming OR does it mean that JRiver etc does not actually play them? I have yet to investigate the Squeezebox option but will do so.
Both run the R3 link given above - and very good it is too.
EDIT.........Aha!!!!!!!!!! I have just found that they ALL work in VLC media player so it is obviously a player issue.Last edited by Guest; 20-02-15, 10:27.
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Originally posted by Nevalti View PostFM still works. Thank God they didn't turn that off or there would probably have been a licence strike. First they drive people to Internet Radio because DAB is so awful and then they make pathetically ill-planned changes that are probably going to render expensive equipment redundant - yet they are not prepared to upgrade the awful DAB - because it will make old DAB radios redundant. Where is the logic?
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Originally posted by Nevalti View PostThank you John. I have tried those in JRiver and MediaMonkey but both report, "There is nothing to play" for every station. Does that simply mean they are not currently streaming OR does it mean that JRiver etc does not actually play them? I have yet to investigate the Squeezebox option but will do so.
Both run the R3 link given above - and very good it is too.
EDIT.........Aha!!!!!!!!!! I have just found that they ALL work in VLC media player so it is obviously a player issue.
There are reports that VLC uses a lot of processing power to deal with the new HLS streams. That isn't a problem is you are using a decent spec'd machine, but worth knowing.
The HLS streams work beautifully in Squeezebox. For Logitech Media Service (LMS) on Windows and Mac computers the procedure needs some new installs but is fairly straightforward. With Ubuntu/Debian, it needs a little more care but is nevertheless fine. For LMS running on NAS boxes it can be trickier, depending on NAS box, and some low power NAS boxes struggle (but people are looking for a solution).
I have the new streams playing fine in LMS installed on both Windows 7 and Ubuntu Server (12.04) boxes.
Let me know if you decide to try the Squeezebox route - I might be able help.
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This is an extremely naïve question, probably, but I should be very grateful if someone would be kind enough to help this non-techie by summarizing the sound difference between:
(1) playing Radio 3 via VLC Media Player using the 320 kbps AAC-LC stream (as helpfully posted by johnb above):
(2) playing Radio 3 on a DAB radio connected by line-out to one's computer (or mike, in my case, because the line-out gave up its ghost after a few months on both my Pure-Evoke sets )
(3) playing Radio 3 via the iPlayer live ('HD')
(4) playing Radio 3 via Listen Again ?
I suspect that my old cloth-ears are not up to the task of differentiating them, but perhaps that might partly down to limitations in my computer and speakers.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostThis is an extremely naïve question, probably, but I should be very grateful if someone would be kind enough to help this non-techie by summarizing the sound difference between:
Between 2 (DAB radio -> PC) and the rest: Options 1, 3, and 4 should give better results, all other things being equal. Once again though, the differences will be limited by capabilities of the PC's soundboard and the attached speakers.
R3 DAB is (or used to be) either 192 kbps mp2 Stereo or 160 kbps mp2 Joint Stereo, depending on whether R5LSX is broadcasting.
(AAC-LC and mp2 are both "lossy" compressed formats in which the data is stored. During the compression some of the data is thrown away. The kbps gives you the amount of data, in 1000 bits per second, that the streams contain.)
So you have DAB using mp2 at 192kbps vs AAC-LC at 320kbps. Not only that but the difference between the two is even more marked as AAC-LC is a much more efficient format, i.e. it is much better even at the same bit-rate.
In addition there is a lot more processing - your DAB radio decodes the mp2 to analogue, your PC then redigitises it, passes it through its mixer, and converts it back to analogue.
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Nevalti
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostFM still works but not interference-free where I live, even with a good roof aerial........... I wish I had it in my car where VHF is decent but quite limited. .......
DAB in a car is genuinely useful because bad FM areas tend to have good DAB transmitters. However, I still find FM preferable to DAB, even in a car, IF there is a good signal for both. That is probably due to the benign compression on FM. With DAB, not only do you lose the low level information they always filter out as 'noise', you also lose the remaining low level information due to road noise.
DAB bubbling mud is obviously an issue as you drive into bad signal areas.
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Nevalti
Originally posted by JFLL View PostThis is an extremely naïve question, probably, but I should be very grateful if someone would be kind enough to help this non-techie by summarizing the sound difference between.......
sounds "nice and clean" because they have discarded a great deal of the sound before it gets transmitted. It amazes me how good the remnants of the music sound BUT listen to each via a good hifi system and even the cloth eared among us should easily tell the difference.
I read somewhere that the British Standard for codecs rates them on how annoying they sound! Personally, I find DAB extremely annoying but the new BBC HLS streams are easy to listen to.
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Nevalti
Originally posted by johnb View Post...you... need JRiver version 20.0.71 or higher to play the BBC HLS streams.........
Let me know if you decide to try the Squeezebox route - I might be able help.
I may well need help with the Squeezebox. It looks quite complicated. Are you aware of a beginners guide to modifying it?
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JFLL
Re msg 53
There's also
(5) R3 via Freeview
(6) R3 via Freesat
(7) Other satellite systems ...
(8) Other Internet based systems - e.g YouView
and possibly also
(9) Phone network systems.
At one time I used to record from Freesat, as I thought that the bit rates were higher than DAB, but the 320 HD streams should be better.
However, the good thing is that a Freesat or Freeview PVR can be set up to record some programmes automatically - e.g CD Review.
Nevalti's comments on DAB are interesting - I'll probably come back on that later.
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Originally posted by Nevalti View PostThanks again John. I downloaded JRiver 20.0.73 and all channels now work perfectly.
I may well need help with the Squeezebox. It looks quite complicated. Are you aware of a beginners guide to modifying it?
No problem. What platform do you run LMS on - is it a computer or a NAS box? If it is a computer, which operating system - Windows, Mac, other?
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Nevalti
Originally posted by johnb View PostNevalti,
No problem. What platform do you run LMS on - is it a computer or a NAS box? If it is a computer, which operating system - Windows, Mac, other?
I also use the confusingly named ZyXEL NSA 320 NAS which works with my SBT without me having to do anything - so presumably that already had the appropriate Squeeze software loaded. It would be nice if everything worked without the PC on but I guess I could live with that. The PC could be left to drift off to sleep and would, presumably, wake-up on demand?
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