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In the Matter of Online Political Files of SM-WVEZ, LLC
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Media Bureau Seeks Comment On The APTS And PBS Petition For Waiver Of NCE Translator Baseline Carriage Notice Requirements
In the Matter of Online Political Files of Floyd County Broadcasters Company, Inc.
In the Matter of Online Political Files of SM-WSFR, LLC
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In the Matter of Online Political Files of Encore Communications, Inc
In the Matter of Online Political Files of L.M. Communications of Kentucky, LLC
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New Intraplex IP Links Include a Flexiva Plug-In
GatesAir is coming out with two new Intraplex IP Links that it says “move the brand into new designs and applications.”
The two AoIP products were announced by Ted Lantz, vice president and general manager, radio and Intraplex products.
GatesAir Flexiva FAX. The IP Link 100e integrates into this exciter.The IP Link 100e is an Intraplex plug-in card that receives FM and digital radio content within GatesAir Flexiva transmitters.
Lantz said the module also establishes a foundation to integrate audio processing and additional air chain applications later.
“The module is added to Flexiva FAX exciters to reliably receive and feed AES-67 and other audio over IP formats direct to the exciter,” the company said.
“The smaller, integrated form factor reduces the cost of using Intraplex audio over IP transport at the transmitter site since no separate hardware codec is required, and frees a 1RU equipment rack slot for auxiliary equipment,” it said.
The module includes Dynamic Stream Splicing software. It sends multiple identical streams over the same network or two separate paths; each stream borrows data from companion streams to avoid service interruptions from packet loss.
“The IP Link 100e also supports the SRT (secure reliable transport) protocol and provides failover service to Icecast or locally stored audio for optimal reliability. The module also provides storage for program content and full duplex capability, allowing engineers to monitor signals off-air.”
IP Link 100cAlso new is the IP Link 100c, a hardware codec for remote contribution and standard STL IP connections that is notable for its small half-rack package.
Applications include remotes, studio-to-studio links, STL service backup and delivery to Icecast streaming servers. It comes with a DC power supply.
The company will introduce them as part of the IBC Showcase virtual conference coming in September.
[Related: “SBS FM Stations See Efficiency With GatesAir”]
The post New Intraplex IP Links Include a Flexiva Plug-In appeared first on Radio World.
Voice Talent: Invest in Your Career
Nacho Sacchi is an bilingual announcer and voice talent in Argentina.
Four years ago I was pushed to become a freelance voice talent after almost 18 years on the same radio station. Things didn’t look good. With my wife and two kids, ages 6 and 8, we decided that it could never get worse (though we never saw 2020 coming).
What to do? The radio environment of the city in which we lived was terrible.
I started Googling … online resources for voice talents … voice agents … voice banks. All articles with information in some cases old and in other cases biased, speaking badly of the competition and good of their own products.
After evaluating the situation, I decided to invest money and time in online voice banks with paid services. I improved my home studio, updated my microphone and invested in hardware like a nice preamp and good noise isolation.
Voices.com, Voice123, Bodalgo and a few others were on my radar. I decided on Voices.com after reading negative and some positive comments. What influenced my decision was that at first glance they seemed the largest, the most serious and the one with the big clients.
It is true what they say: You have to invest time and effort. And so I did. I participated for several months in all searches that included what my voice had to offer: Latin American Neutral Spanish, Latin Accented English and much more.
It was four months without a result. But more than 70 auditions later, I had my first paying job in the international world of freelance voices. And a few months later, I had recovered the investment of joining the bank and was preparing to continue growing.
The Opportunity
Why do I tell you this? How can my story help others?
The COVID-19 crisis has led many to rethink their careers or consider how to generate a new income. And that’s where we have to take advantage of the crisis and open ourselves to new work horizons.
The human voice will never be replaced by a machine. Although our assistant Google or Alexa will surprise us, they will never speak like a human being. What’s more, behind those attempts there are human voices.
So where is the opportunity?
The internet democratizes, puts us on equal footing — the voice talent who lives in Los Angeles, the one who lives in San Pedro Sula in Honduras or in Mar del Plata Argentina or in London!
In a digital audition, the internet eliminates factors that a voice talent can’t easily control, and thus allows them to compete on their talent alone.
If the audio quality is good, all the different voices are on more of an equal footing.
So how do we distinguish ourselves?
We have to be the fastest and understand exactly what the customer is looking for. Understand the markets and listen to what is heard in each country.
How? Maybe spying on successful voice talent demos, listening to international radio stations, seeing patterns on big TV ads and trying to duplicate that … and also making the effort to read that “matrix” and seeing what the market might be lacking and empowering your uniqueness! Perhaps the next trend is your quirky sound?
So to fellow voice talents who might be discouraged, I say: Prepare your home studios, invest in your careers and move on. Inside your house, but always moving forward.
The author’s website is nachosacchi.com.ar.
The post Voice Talent: Invest in Your Career appeared first on Radio World.
Broadcast Devices Preps for End of Flash Support
Adobe will stop distributing and updating Flash Player at the end of this year. That plan was announced in 2017, and now the end of support is coming up.
This will have an impact on developers, businesses and consumers.
Bob Tarsio is president of Broadcast Devices Inc. He has been raising awareness of this change with his clients and answering questions about how it affects BDI products.
Radio World: Bring us up to date, what should radio stations know about Flash right now?
Bob Tarsio: Not only BDI-provided equipment but all Flash-enabled hardware and software will be impacted more or less by the end of Flash support. So I urge everyone to check with their respective providers for update information.
For BDI customers, all Flash-dependent products will continue to operate for their intended functions even after the Flash sunset. We want to stress this because some might think that everything stops working on 1-1-21 sort of a Y2K thing all over!
What will be impacted is the ability to use commonly available browsers to access your equipment.
This does not mean however that the equipment cannot be interrogated or controlled. That is because all BDI Flash-dependent products use SNMP, or Simple Network Management Protocol, for communication between SNMP-based software such as the BDI Stack Graphical User Interface, which is available for free download from our support page.
What customers will have difficulty with is accessing the web servers that are present in our Flash-based products for such things as initial setup including IP configuration information such as IP addresses, subnets, etc. In addition, the ability to change passwords or usernames.
All other communication is unaffected as SNMP is used to communicate with not only our BDI Stack program but third-party software and hardware such as the popular remote controls that support SNMP communications.
RW: Which of your products are affected?
Tarsio: There are basically three product classes of BDI products that may be impacted: all of our popular DPS-100D series True RMS Power meters; some SWP series controllers and remote controls; and some SWP series antenna products.
In addition our ATB/GPM/DAB model base number digital/analog audio switchers can be affected. We made some as SWP base model number units and ATBGPM/DAB base model number units that had web access that did depend on Adobe Flash player for operation.
All new shipping equipment is already Flash-free.
To tell if your equipment is Flash-dependent, access your unit via a web browser, and if it asks to run Adobe Flash player, you have an impacted unit. If not you can either continue to use your product as usual or for older units these can be upgraded if the customer so desires.
By the way, the older units not relying on Flash only used the web browser interface for initial setup as well, but these will continue to function.
RW: What should users of your affected products do now?
Tarsio: First, make sure all of your units can be accessed by a web browser to determine if that equipment is Flash-dependent as I described. Record your information now including username, passwords and IP setup information. Visit BDI’s website support page, where we have information about what customers can do to upgrade their equipment in and out of warranty. There is a document for each product class, and these discuss what customer options are.
What we can tell you is that no BDI equipment will be made obsolete by the Adobe Flash sunset. All impacted equipment will either continue to operate or is eligible for upgrade.
In the case of the DPS-100D series it’s like getting a new meter because the upgrade described on our web page is the new Generation II operating system, which makes some real improvements to even existing DPS-100D series power meters.
RW: What else should readers know?
Tarsio: BDI provides what we believe to be good support for products in and out of warranty, sometimes for a lot longer than many have come to expect for electronics in general. This is ever more important to the broadcast community, which faces challenging economic times along with the rest of the country.
All BDI products are today Adobe Flash-free. Our offerings that have web servers utilize HTML5 browser interfaces, and we provide applications software for our current product lines, which include our new DPS-100D Generation II true RMS power meter, SWP-200 series motorized switch controllers, SWP-300 remote controls and SWP-206 Antenna monitor products. On the audio side the ATB/GPM/DAB digital/analog audio switchers and our AES-400 series audio switchers have an optional web interface that has always been Flash-free.
Contact us at BDI if you have questions or need guidance on next steps.
The post Broadcast Devices Preps for End of Flash Support appeared first on Radio World.
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In the Matter of Online Political Files of Commonwealth Radio, L.L.C. Licensee of Commercial Radio Statioms
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Broadcast Applications
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BW Broadcast Re-Energizes DSPXmini
BW Broadcast’s DSPXmini Encore processor is the followup to the original DSPXmini.
[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]
It is a four-band AM/FM processor available with standard stereo generator, peak limiting, presets and RMS leveling. Machine communications include HTML, FTP, SNMP, Telnet and RS232.
Added features include RDS encoding, remote control monitoring and the company’s Plan B backup audio scheme.
Info: www.bwbroadcast.com
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