ChatterBank2 mins ago
Outside Radio broadcasts.......
4 Answers
Listening to talksport radio and they have co-presenters, one in Poland, one in England and they chat away as if they are in the same studio, even taking calls, cricket, weather and traffic updates without talking over one another or delays.
Are they having us on or what?
Are they having us on or what?
Answers
Years ago the only way to get a broadcast from a remote location was via satellite and the early communicatio n sats where slow at processing the incoming data and then rebroadcasti ng it back to the ground, this is what introduced the delays we all remember from the 80's on TV and radio.
This days radio broadcasts from a remote location in the same country...
12:09 Sat 16th Jun 2012
Ah, the good old days , when David Coleman sounded as though he was on a very poor phone line. Perhaps he was. Maybe TalkSport has found a suburb of Salford called 'Poland' ?
Most mysterious is the 1 a.m. programme 'Up All Night', on Radio 5. The Scottish presenter, who alternates, is apparently in London, but the truth is that he broadcasts from the US, where he lives. This fact is never mentioned. The other one, Dotun Adebayo, is in Britain, and mentions that quite frequently. This is all some BBC dark secret, but why has never been explained.
Most mysterious is the 1 a.m. programme 'Up All Night', on Radio 5. The Scottish presenter, who alternates, is apparently in London, but the truth is that he broadcasts from the US, where he lives. This fact is never mentioned. The other one, Dotun Adebayo, is in Britain, and mentions that quite frequently. This is all some BBC dark secret, but why has never been explained.
Years ago the only way to get a broadcast from a remote location was via satellite and the early communication sats where slow at processing the incoming data and then rebroadcasting it back to the ground, this is what introduced the delays we all remember from the 80's on TV and radio.
This days radio broadcasts from a remote location in the same country will more likely be sent over either ISDN or even just the normal internet with next to no delay. broadcasts from further away may still be sent via the internet with only a few hundred milliseconds delay or via satellite but as modern comms sats are a lot faster than the early ones there is also only a few hundred milliseconds delay even from the other side of the world.
This days radio broadcasts from a remote location in the same country will more likely be sent over either ISDN or even just the normal internet with next to no delay. broadcasts from further away may still be sent via the internet with only a few hundred milliseconds delay or via satellite but as modern comms sats are a lot faster than the early ones there is also only a few hundred milliseconds delay even from the other side of the world.