Difference between pages "Broadcasting History" and "01v96i User Manual"

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This is a log of the history of the means by which URY '''broadcasts'''.
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This page is currently under construction. Please check back regularly over Summer 2019 as [[User:10418]] continues to write this up.
  
== On Air ==
 
  
=== Induction Loop ===
 
  
Initially, URY broadcast to campus using an induction loop system on AM 999KHz.
 
  
=== Low Power AM ===
 
  
In the late 90s, URY switched to a LPAM system broadcasting on 1350KHz.  This brought a large improvement in reception.
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[[Patching]]
  
== Online ==
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[[Channel Pairing]]
  
TBC
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[[Scene Management]]
  
=== Radioplayer ===
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[[Dynamics]]
  
2010/11 saw the migration of URY's online simulcasting to the UK Radioplayer platform, being one of the first student radio adopters of the industry standard platform.
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[[Equalisation]]
  
== On Demand ==
 
  
TBC (when did URYPlayer start?)
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If you notice any issues with the technical content of this guide after October 2019, please contact me immediately.
  
== On Cable ==
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I am currently writing this from a combination of the User Manual & Memory, and will revise this when I return to university in September and can spend more time with the mixer.
  
When based in or around the Physics Building URY was relayed via the Distribution Network of the University on Channel E, shared with YSTV, with typically YSTV using this weekday lunchtimes when URY was closed down. There was no access to the Contribution Network at the time URY moved to Vanbrugh (where the Security Centre presently is) so this ceased on a routine basis in 1981. However, URY was still occasionally later relayed via YSTV, for example for a while as the sound to accompany their Quaxfax in-vision teletext service in 1985.
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P.S. As of March 2020 this guide should be considered abandon ware, and any Freshers with too much time/too little life should feel free to continue it.

Revision as of 00:08, 5 March 2020

This page is currently under construction. Please check back regularly over Summer 2019 as Jacob Dicker (10418) continues to write this up.



Patching

Channel Pairing

Scene Management

Dynamics

Equalisation


If you notice any issues with the technical content of this guide after October 2019, please contact me immediately.

I am currently writing this from a combination of the User Manual & Memory, and will revise this when I return to university in September and can spend more time with the mixer.

P.S. As of March 2020 this guide should be considered abandon ware, and any Freshers with too much time/too little life should feel free to continue it.