Starting next week, Norway will become the first country to switch off its nationwide FM radio network and convert completely to digital signals.The change was announced in 2015, and will take months to be fully implemented.The Norwegian government decided to make the transition in part because digital radio can provide many more channels for the same price — eight times as many, to be precise.Norway currently has room for just five national radio stations on its FM system — three public broadcasting channels, and two commercial channels. Other national radio stations, as well as some regional and local stations, are already using the digital system.Supporters of the switch also say digital radio will sound clearer than FM, or frequency modulation, and that the signal will be clearer in places where fjords and mountains interfere with FM signals.As we reported in 2015, the Norwegian government also says that digital radio is less likely to fail in extreme conditions, which lawmakers saw as an advantage for emergency preparedness.The CEO of Digitalradio Norway says the country's FM network is antiquated and would need massive investments to maintain — so, to allow investment in digital radio, the FM network needs to be shut down.But NPR's Frank Langfitt reports that the public in general isn't happy about the decision to abandon FM entirely.