Apparently-to: scdx@get.pp.se
From: "George Wood"
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:: MediaScan
:: SWEDEN CALLING DXERS
:: from Radio Sweden
:: Number 2280--October 7, 1997
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Satellite, shortwave and other electronic media news from Radio
Sweden.
This week's bulletin was written by George Wood.
Packet Radio BID SCDX2280
Updated Web edition at: http://www.sr.se/rs/english/media/
All times UTC unless otherwise noted.
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- This is a little early, as I will be on vacation next week (and
thus, the program of October 7 has been recorded ahead of time).
ARTHUR CUSHEN--A legend in the shortwave listening hobby has passed
away. New Zealand's Arthur Cushen died on September 20th, after
suffering for several years from bone cancer. For many years Arthur
was the voice from the South Pacific on Radio Netherlands DX Jukebox,
and later Media Network. Many listeners probably never guessed Arthur
was blind, as he transcended his handicap to become one of the best
known personalities within the shortwave fraternity.
We've received many messages from media colleagues and hobbyists
expressing their sadness over the loss. To quote just one, from Victor
Goonetilleke in Sri Lanka, a colleague of Arthur's at "Media Network":
"...for those of us with a passionate love for our hobby, Arthur in
many ways was the embodiment of what a very personal hobby meant, and
his leaving removes a link with the pioneering days of SW Radio
listening. As long as Arthur was in the hobby we felt that continuity
even those those early days of radio were romantic tales from a bygone
era."
Certainly this program, and it's predecessor Sweden Calling DXers,
have been greatly enriched by Arthur's contributions over the years.
He will be missed.
DOUG DEMAW--Doug DeMaw, author of "DeMaw's Workbench," world-
renowned amateur radio designer, writer, and personality, died at his
home September 28, 1997, of acute leukemia. Doug joined the ARRL
headquarters staff in 1965, and continued with the ARRL in various
technical and editorial positions for 18 years. In 1983, Doug retired
to the north woods of Michigan, where he formed "Oak Hills Research".
He continued to be prolific in producing books for the ARRL. He was,
in his own words, "recruited by Ike Kerschner" to write for
"Monitoring Times" in 1988, and his straightforward, understandable
writing style has encouraged and inspired potential experimenters ever
since. (Rachel Baughn, Managing Editor, "Monitoring Times")
SPUTNIK--October 4, 1997 is the 40th anniversary of the launch of
Sputnik 1, the world's first artificial satellite. With it, Arthur C.
Clarke's vision of more than a decade before was realized.
NORDIC MEDIA NEWS
NORDEN THIS WEEK--There's a new radio station covering the Nordic
region, which besides Sweden Norway, and Denmark, also includes
Iceland and Finland, and Denmark's former colony Greenland.
Radio Sweden primarily covers Sweden, but also takes up important
stories in the other Nordic countries. Radio Finland does the same
from the Finnish horizon, and both broadcast in English daily. Radio
Norway International, on the other hand, only carries English once a
week. Radio Denmark had an English program last year, when Copenhagen
was the European Cultural Capital.
That was discontinued at the end of the year, but former Radio Denmark
presenter Julian Isherwood started his own weekly program called
"Copenhagen Calling", available not on shortwave, but on satellite and
the Internet via the World Radio Network. Now Julian has done it
again, with a new weekly program called "Norden This Week". "Norden"
is the Scandinavian word for the region. I called up Julian Isherwood
and asked him about the new program, and you can hear the interview in
the October 7 edition of "MediaScan".
"Norden This Week" is carried on the World Radio Network to Europe,
Africa, Asia and the Pacific, and North America Sundays at 17:00 hrs
UTC, which is 12:00 hrs Eastern Time in North America.
More details at:
http://www.euroword.dk/norden.htm
It's also available in RealAudio at:
http://audio.wrn.org/audio/ntw.ram
PLAYBOY--Updating the report last time, the Playboy TV Network
launched to Scandinavia on October 1. PBTV/S will be on the air
nightly between midnight and 4:00 AM CET to Norway, Sweden, Denmark,
and Finland. (Curt Swinehart) As reported last time, Playboy takes
over from TV6 when it signs off daily on Sirius 1 on 12.015 GHz.
Travel TV has started on Sirius 1 in D2-MAC, sharing the transponder
on 11.862 GHz with Nickelodeon and ZTV daily between 13:00 and 16:00
hrs CET. (Richard Karlsson, "Aftonbladet")
NORWAY--TV Norge ended its transmissions from Intelsat 707 11.016 GHz
on September 30. Transmissions continue via Thor 2 at the same orbital
position on 11.421 GHz. (Richard Karlsson, "Aftonbladet")
TV8--Sweden's new business channel TV8 starts digital transmissions on
Tele-X on 12.676 GHz on October 15. The channel will move to Sirius 2
after that satellite is launched. Contrary to previous reports, TV8
will be MPEG-2 only, becoming Sweden's first completely digital TV
channel. (Richard Karlsson and Frank Oestergren, both at
"Aftonbladet")
DIGITAL TV--Nokia's new digital satellite receiver for Scandinavia,
the Mediamaster 9610S is ready to be sold in stores. But as Canal Plus
is delaying the launch of its Canal Digital package to Scandinavia,
Nokia and the shops are reluctant to do any marketing. The Canal
Digital package on 1 degree West on 11.174 GHz carries Norway's NRK 1
and TV Norge, and TV Finland. The package at 11.278 GHz carries the
pan-Nordic Canal Plus service, as well as the separate Canal Plus
channels to Sweden, Finland, Norway, and Denmark, the Hallmark
Channel, and Finland's Nelonen. (Frank Oestergren, "Aftonbladet")
If Canal Plus/Digital is slow off the mark, it may be outpaced by
media mogul Rupert Murdoch. Last time we reported on the first
Scandinavia channels from Murdoch's British Sky Television, Sky News
and National Geographic, and Sky Entertainment, analog channels at 1
degree West. Now BSkyB is considering launching digital channels to
Scandinavia. BSkyB's head of international distribution, Kirsten
McConnell, has been in Scandinavian negotiating with cable companies.
She told "Dagens Nyheter's" Per Luthander:
"If our evaluation next year shows that we have made the right
decision to focus on Scandinavia, we'll concentrate even more here."
("Dagens Nyheter")
EUROPE
IFA--In the last edition of the program, we talked to Swedish Radio's
Christer Grewin about the unveiling of receivers for Digital Audio
Broadcasting at the recent giant IFA Consumer Electronics Show in
Berlin. While DAB was our greatest interest at the show, I also asked
Christer if there was anything else that caught his eye. He mentions
two things, DVD (Digital Versatile Disk, it used to be called Digital
Video Disk until they found new applications for it) and large flat TV
sets.
DVD--The DVD Forum held a briefing September 15 on the status of its
standard for rewriteable DVD, known as DVD-RAM, but when the briefing
was over, the prospect of a unifying format did not seem significantly
improved. The DVD Forum, a group of 10 electronics and media
companies, helped establish standards for DVD-Video and DVD-ROM
players, and is seeking to do the same for rewrite-able DVD
technology. ("Wired News" via Pointcast)
ASTRA--The shopping channel QVC UK on transponder 38 has been in
PAL clear since September 15, and will apparently remain so. ("SATCO
DX")
Galavision has ceased on transponder 44, and continues only on
Panamsat 1 on 11.515 GHz. (Richard Karlsson, "Aftonbladet"
It is possible (but not confirmed) that the 24 hour BBC News channel
will take over Astra transponder 56, now that DF-1 has moved the
channels there to transponder 104 (12.480 GHz).
Sky has been carrying out test transmissions on this transponder. Sky
News was there in MPEG-2 for 2 weeks, followed by a test of the Adult
Channel code, which was ready for a change of smartcard on October 1.
Three PAL channels from BBC/Flextech are to start on transponder 57 on
November 1: UK Style (with the best of the BBC's travel, lifestyle,
and gardening programs), UK Horizon (with programs about life, nature,
and human interest, and which might be called BBC Horizon), and UK
Arena (arts and entertainment programs, which might be called BBC
Arena). It's uncertain how the three channels will share the
transponder.
All 4 channels will also initially transmit in encrypted MPEG-2 on
Orion 1 for cable distribution. This will be moved to Astra 2B when
that is launched. UK Gold will relaunched in October with a new logo,
new schedule, and a fresh onscreen identify. UK Living is being given
a facelift in November, when its name will become Living. (James
Robinson and "What Satellite TV" magazine)
Rupert Murdoch's Asian music service Channel V had been reported
expected to launch shortly on transponder 57. ("What Satellite TV")
Sky Box Office 1 has replaced Sky Movies Gold on transponder 60 in PAL
videocrypt. ("SATCO DX") Sky will have a third PPV event on October
11. (James Robinson) Sky has also secured the evening hours of
transponder 59 for Sky Box Office. ("What Satellite TV")
Sci-Channel is joining the DF-1 package on Astra on October 10. (James
Robinson) Sci-Fi says it has postponed plans to launch The Thriller
Channel this Autumn. ("What Satellite TV")
Knowledge TV has started on 12.382 GHz in clear MPEG-2. ("SATCO DX"
and James Robinson)
The Astra-Net Internet/computer service started on transponder 88 on
September 29, replacing the Travel Channel and Pro 7. Travel has moved
to transponder 74 in MPEG-2. (James Robinson)
AB Sat has started on 12.266 GHz with the same channels as on Eutelsat
II-F1 11.678 GHz (in MPEG-2 Viaccess and Mediaguard). ("SATCO DX") As
reported last time, this move is part of the Simulcrypt agreement
signed with CanalSatellite, which allows subscribers to receive both
packages with one set-top box. Until now CanalSatellite subscribers
whose dish was aimed at Astra could not receive the AB Sat signal.
Radio Netherlands' Zomer TV channel, which was due to close in
September, will end on December 31 instead, and has changed its name
to Wereldomroep TV. ("What Satellite TV" and Richard Karlsson,
"Aftonbladet")
EUTELSAT--Fashion TV has started on Hot Bird 2 on 11.881 GHz in clear
PAL. ("SATCO DX") Fashion TV is also in MPEG-2 on Astra transponder 90
(12.207 GHz). (James Robinson)
There's now a Polish sound channel to Animal Planet on Eutelsat II-F1
on 11.055 GHz, on 7.20 GHz. Tele-text subtitles in Swedish, Norwegian,
and Danish are coming soon. (Richard Karlsson, "Aftonbladet")
Hot Bird 3 has completed its move from 29 East to 13 East. The first
official transmissions are expected within a few days.
See:
http://www.satcodx.com/hb3.html
("SATCO DX")
The Hungarian MTV2 is to start transmissions on Hot Bird 3 on 12.130
GHz in clear PAL. (Richard Karlsson, "Aftonbladet")
MANCHESTER UNITED--English soccer champions Manchester United
announced on September 30 that they are teaming up with BSkyB and the
Granada Media Group to launch a television channel devoted to the
club, called MUTV. The new channel will be a subscription service,
distributed by digital satellite and cable, and will launch next
Autumn. MUTV will be a daily service offering six hours of prime-time
programming. It's the first such initiative by an English soccer club.
(Reuters)
DIGITAL--Europe's digital broadcasting pioneers have agreed to support
open standards, heralding a potential end to the wars over TV set-top
digital-decoder boxes, and opening the way for standardized
Interactive TV and Internet services. The agreement will encourage
development of a new generation of multimedia digital decoders that
will allow consumers to access all forms of digital services.
Canal Plus of France, British Sky Broadcasting, Kirch Group of Germany
and other key players came to an agreement in Geneva at a meeting of
the steering group of the Digital Video Broadcasting consortium, a
group that combines virtually all players in European television from
broadcasters to regulators to makers of TV sets and set-top boxes.
The consortium virtually controls the digital market in Europe because
it is responsible for recommending technical standards. Although it
has already determined digital-transmission standards and other
essentials, it hadn't yet agreed on standards for set-top boxes.
The lack of a standard has led to market fragmentation, with equipment
manufacturers unable to achieve economies of scale and consumers
having to either stock their homes with a half-dozen set-top boxes or
limit their access to broadcasters. An open standard would change all
that, allowing development of multimedia terminals for consumers that
would permit access to all digital-TV broadcasters as well as to the
Internet. These devices, yet to be developed, would be sold in stores
and compete with network computers and personal computers.
The agreement to support the development of such devices based on an
open standard means that set-top decoder boxes will be able to
communicate and receive content from different digital sources.
At Wednesday's meeting, Canal Plus formally urged the DVB to adopt a
common application-programming interface a language that would allow
set-top boxes to communicate and receive content from different
sources, said Henri Joubaud, Canal Plus's technical director. One
strategy DVB is considering to standardize set-top boxes is to base a
common operating system on Java, a programming language developed by
Sun Microsystems Inc.that runs across platforms on the Internet and on
a whole range of devices.
Canal Plus will be ready to launch such a device by mid-1998, Mr.
Joubaud said. The device would coexist at least initially with the
current devices, which are rented to consumers. People close to the
situation said Kirch stopped short of announcing it is adopting open
standards but agreed that open standards are the right way to go. A
Kirch spokesman said executives couldn't be reached immediately to
comment. ("Wall Street Journal")
We reported last time that German public broadcasters ARD and ZDF
unveiled their digital television plans at the IFA Show. Now they have
begun transmitting 60 digital radio and TV channels on Astra at
12.421, 11.875, and 11.995 GHz. ("What Satellite TV")
ARD and ZDF are offering digital programming free of charge. They hope
that their huge libraries of films, documentaries and popular
children's programs will rival the films and sports events from DF-1
and Premiere.
The public stations have been unable to gain access to Germany's cable
--- NetMgr 1.00.g4+
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* Origin: GET, Lidingo, Sweden, +46-8-7655670 (2:201/505)
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