Abstract
This article is about the diffi cult path towards digital radio in Europe. In technical terms, digitalisation refers to the transformation of communication technologies from an analogue to a binary logic. Digital may be seen as a synonym for « sampled, quantifi ed, and presented in binary characters »; digital broadcasting refers to the transmission of digitised audio, video, and auxiliary information as data signals. (Reimers 2005 : 1) One might say that the logic of the computer, which always worked digitally, is gradually taking over all aspects of the production, distribution, consumption, and storing of broadcast messages. What sounds like a purely technical process has strong effects on all aspects of the media, including politics and economics, the production process itself, as well as programme content. One aspect of digitalisation is that it allows for convergence, meaning the fusion of the traditionally separate functions of radio and
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