Company
Says New Proposals Do Not Protect Wireless Microphones
FCC Should Focus on Plans for Fixed Services
NILES,
IL, May 6, 2008 — Shure
Incorporated, the nation’s leading wireless microphone manufacturer, today said
recent “white spaces” plans offered by major technology companies will create
overwhelming havoc for users and audiences of wireless microphones, and the
company urged the Federal Communications Commission not to be “distracted” by
efforts by Microsoft, Google, Motorola, and others to downplay the role of
continued FCC technical testing as an important input to the Commission’s
policy decisions. If reliable
interference protection cannot be demonstrated in the FCC spectrum sensing
tests, the Commission should once and for all state that it will not approve
new portable devices in the television band, Shure’s filing states.
“Neither the beacon plan proposed by Google, nor the one
submitted by Motorola will provide solid protection for wireless microphone
users,” said Mark Brunner, Shure’s Senior Director, Global Public
Relations. “These unacceptable proposals
would pull the plug on wireless microphone users everywhere.”
In its filing, Shure asserts that Motorola would have the
FCC believe that its combined geo-location, disabling beacon, and spectrum
sensing plan “is a comprehensive approach” that would protect white space
incumbents like wireless microphone users.
“But that couldn’t be further from the truth,” said Brunner, “none of
these approaches is a practical or currently technically feasible solution to
reliably protect wireless microphone users from damaging interference.”
“Wireless microphones are vital to broadcast, news, sports,
music, theater, and many religious services – if the FCC fails to protect
wireless microphones, news broadcasting will be hampered, modern sports
coverage will suffer and live music and theater will take a giant step
backwards,” he added.
Noting that the Google beacon plan before the Commission
isn’t “fleshed out,” Shure’s filing focused on the Motorola proposal, stating
that the plan suffers from a host of unresolved technical issues. According to
Shure, the FCC must recognize that the proposed beacon is just a concept and
must be fully tested. In addition, the filing points out that the beacon system
relies on spectrum sensing technology, which has encountered significant
problems in the FCC’s labs. If devices
that rely on spectrum sensing cannot detect a wireless microphone, then they
won’t be able to detect a beacon, the filing states.
“The plan is completely impractical – it requires wireless
microphone users to purchase and deploy disabling beacons, then access a database
and enter in a litany of information in order to be ‘legitimate’ in a given
geographic location,” Brunner explained.
“This would be the kiss of death for news teams covering breaking
stories who have only minutes to deploy their cameras and microphones. Users
would also be required to install a beacon for each TV channel used, a
requirement that would actually result in a waste of significant spectrum when
multiple different operators are covering the same event.”
Instead, Shure recommended that the FCC focus on evaluating
the prospects of new fixed services in the TV band. Specifically, Shure asked the FCC to give
serious consideration to the fixed service/adjacent channel protection plan
proposed by FiberTower and Rural Telecom Group, and supported by Sprint and
T-Mobile. “With appropriate power
limits, this fixed/adjacent channel approach could go far toward providing
increased broadband access for Americans while maintaining much needed
protections for wireless microphone services,” the filing asserts.
About Shure Incorporated
Founded in
1925, Shure Incorporated (www.shure.com) is
widely acknowledged as the world's leading manufacturer of microphones and
audio electronics. Over the years, the Company has designed and produced many
high-quality professional and consumer audio products that have become
legendary for performance, reliability, and value. Shure’s diverse product line includes
world-class wired microphones and wireless microphone systems for performers
and presenters, award-winning earphones and headsets for MP3 players and
smartphones, and top-rated phonograph cartridges for professional DJs. Today,
Shure products are the first choice whenever audio performance is a top
priority.
Shure
Incorporated corporate headquarters is located in Niles, Illinois, in the
United States. The Company has additional manufacturing facilities and regional
sales offices in China, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Mexico, The United Kingdom,
and the United States