Tag Archives: radio

Knowing Too Much

I heard an old, familiar song on the radio this morning. But something about it was off, and I knew what. I found myself yelling at the radio, “Use a higher bitrate!” For you see, the chorus of the song exhibited something that sounded like the notorious “underwater” artifact in MP3 when encoding with too low a bitrate.

I remember first hearing perhaps 10 years ago that radio stations were starting to move all of their music to MP3 (prior to that, I remember hearing that some would have a stack of about 10 CD players with music queued up; who really knows? And I’m sure varying radio stations use different equipment and setups). I just assumed that a radio station would use the highest bitrate possible. Perhaps this particular encoding was a leftover from when the radio station first moved to MP3 (the song itself was from 1995), when they assigned an intern to use some shareware encoder that was only capable of 96 kbps MP3.

I know I can’t be the only multimedia geek who gets frustrated at seeing sub-optimality deployed in the world at large. I remember staying at a hotel during Christmas of 2000 (the same year I was just starting to study multimedia) where the in-hotel movie preview system through the TV displayed horrible blocking artifacts. At the time, I only vaguely understood what could have been going on.