Bell’s Touch is not a radio, my first impressions
On a larf I decided to violate a contract I’m a party to. Yes, I know, I’m such a rebel. Today I decided to listen to internet radio on my cell phone.
I’m on Bell’s $7 unlimited browsing plan. The Terms of Service clearly state that streaming audio is not allowed. It’s one of those clauses that they use to terminate accounts that go over some sliding limit of profitable bandwidth use. Since this month I had only used four megabytes and the average for killed accounts seems to be about two thousand, I decided to push my luck. I decided to forego my iPod in favour of my HTC Touch and Windows Media Player. (The Touch is notable as being the only smartphone able to get a consumer unlimited data plan in Canada.)
My stream of choice was Digitally Imported’s Trance stream. I gave it a go at home on the 96 kilobit WMA stream and was surprised to hear very choppy music with the default buffering. I benchmarked my phone at an average download of 400 kilobit over download, and now it can’t take 96 kilobit? I double checked and Windows Media Player was set for a 384 kilobit cellular connection. When using TCPMP I was able to get 96 kilobit MP3 reliably without any changes to buffer settings but I spent most of the day using WMP.
I set myself up for 40 kilobit music stream. It played on my phone just fine with the basic Windows Media Player that came with the device. Next up: Getting this music through my headphones.
This was trickier. The phone itself has no headphone jack. It does come with a gadget that splits the USB mini jack into USB jack and what they label a headphone jack. It’s not your standard 8mm jack, it’s about the same size as a USB-mini jack but asymmetric and skewed. I assume it’s some jack that’s meant for cellular headsets. There’s also a converter to something sub-8mm that I found useless. Into this splitter I plugged in a pair of earphones with the skewed adapter that came with the Touch.
At 40 kilobit I was able to walk around downtown Toronto towards campus with no skips or bumps. Instead of being pleased with this I was just disappointed that I couldn’t use my own headphones. It’s impossible to give a good judgement of sound quality here.
Even in a noisy environment I’m able to tell the difference between 40 kilobit WMA and 96 kilobit WMA when using the pair of AKG K27i headphones I use for walkabouts. And that’s not even considering the pair of Sennheiser HD555 that I use for home enjoyment of music. On the pair that came with the device I couldn’t tell between 40 kilobit and 96 kilobit in a quiet environment, and I haven’t figured out how to connect my real headphones yet.
So far the only thing I can say is it’s a pain.






