Final ‘Digital Britain’ Report Issued
     
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All the United Kingdom’s national radio stations and many local services will stop broadcasting on analog by the end of 2015 under the government’s timetable announced in the final “Digital Britain” report, the Guardian newspaper reports.

The Guardian also said the vacated FM spectrum would be filled by “a new tier of ultra-local radio consisting of small local commercial and community stations.”

The switchover is to be announced two years in advance and not until digital accounts for half of all radio listening. RW has reported on the progress of this proposal in its various stages.

The government also required that DAB must be comparable to current FM coverage, and DAB must reach 90% of all the population and all major roads before the upgrade timetable can begin, the Guardian summarized.

Advocates say digital radio in the U.K. now accounts for more than 20% of listening and hope the U.K.’s digital migration will act as a catalyst for other Euro markets.

Semiconductor supplier Frontier Silicon said it welcomes the recommendations in the final report and the proposed completion of a digital migration within six years.

“Today’s report ... favors DAB as the preferred platform for future radio broadcasting in the U.K. and calls on a commitment from the car industry to facilitate digital switchover by means of a five-point plan,” Frontier states.

The company said it supplies technology for the majority of digital radios sold in Britain and that it anticipates a three-fold business increase in annual shipments or sales over three years thanks to the migration. It also said it looked forward to meeting the challenge presented by the government’s stipulation that the cost of the cheapest DAB radio must fall below £20.

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Strange how most contributors don’t want to be recognised isn’t it? Also strange how and why Grants Blog takes half truths and purports to display tem together to deliver a cogent argument against what is demonstrably the most advanced, technically viable and commercially attractive path to deliver Radio to the country. When it is freed from the restrictions imposed upon it - it can and will deliver an extremely stable signal to mobile and in building listeners - and a superb range of exciting and varied additional services and applications. Some of these will also deliver new revenue streams for Advertisers and Broadcasters too - which most pundits are ignoring! They are also ignoring that Digital Radio will bring a diversity to the listening audiences that has simply been out of reach. The Eureka 147 family (or DAB as it is stil known to many) is a vibrant delivery mechanism that is straining at the leash to be allowed to show and fulfil its potential. The negativity shown (by the majority of commentators who simply do not have VALID data to hand) does nothing to promote broadcasting - or to improve the lot of fellow radio fans such as me - who finds it very difficult to see ANY rational behind their Ludite protestations. Analogue Radio has its place and I am sure that the V & A will have a superb exhibit featuring this 20th Century dinosaur in the very near future.
By Tony Orwin on 7/3/2009
Hopefully all digital in the USA is next! HD is much more efficient than analog and sounds better than FM.
By Anonymous on 7/11/2009
Why on earth would the commercial broadcasters want to switch of FM in that scenario anyway! its still going to be providing a huge chunk of their revenue - it just isn't going to happen like this. That would be turkey's voting for Christmas! The industry needs to wake up - and say no. It is also clear that we are seeing the results of intense lobbying by elements of the device industry, who are becoming more and more desperate to stave off the inevitability of DAB's (and probably their own) demise.
By Anonymous on 6/29/2009
This is all based on some very strange assumptions. See Grant Goddard's Blog http://www.blogcatalog.com/blog/grant-goddard-radio-blog/b8d320b262805c950a9120a76fd4e1a6 "However, instead of using the data in the Digital Britain report, if a graph is constructed of the official quarterly data from RAJAR, the resultant trendline displays a noticeably less steep gradient. Using this industry data, the 50% criterion is unlikely to be reached through ‘organic growth’ until 2018."
By Anonymous on 6/29/2009
What a load of nonsense. There is nothing wrong with FM, switching it off would leave the UK isolated and upset a lot of people used to listening to FM on their clock radios, mobile phones, cars etc.
By Anonymous on 6/29/2009

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