I don't think there is a format opportunity in appealing to persons who are easily shocked by matters relating to morality and social values.
Brother Stair on shortwave?
I don't think there is a format opportunity in appealing to persons who are easily shocked by matters relating to morality and social values.
Depending on who you read and believe on here - in car listening is either the biggest audience or perhaps not.
Brother Stair on shortwave?
The same profanity laws that apply to AM & FM are also in place for HD. No difference.
There is rather precise data coming from the 200 diary markets that Nielsen measures... where listening location is precisely tracked. Roughly 2/3 of listening is not in the car, and is fairly equally divided between home and non-car away from home locations.
The PPM does not divide away from home into car and stationary locations, but the percentage in-home is about the same as in the diary realm, so we can assume the rest of the formula works out about the same.
That just made me think one way for HD to gain more visibility would be to waive those laws on HD-only stations, hire Howard or reunite Opie with Anthony, play uncensored music and comedy bits. It might get more people to pay attention to HD as a technology. This will also never happen of course, either the FCC or public outcry from the "think of the children" crowd will ensure that, but just think: free, uncensored radio for people whose pearls remain unclutched whenever someone says a naughty word.
There is slight merit in the suggestion, based on satellite which was probably rescued from bankruptcy by Howard Stern. But - satellite actually WORKS. HD does NOT. At least not very well.
There are some things they could do to increase reliability:
(1) Fall back to C-Quam for AM and rename it AM HD-2.
(2) Give up on RDS and other auxiliary services and move the sidebands back into the channel on FM. From a little bit of reverse engineering on the code, it looks to me like it will decode the HD sidebands wherever they are located.
(3) The radio firmware should be re-written to detect when a consumer tunes directly to HD-2, bypassing the analog / HD-1 - and delete the need for delay. It looks to me like the algorithm to synchronize with analog is what is taking all the time, it is comparative fast to lock onto the digital sidebands. So there is no need to synchronize if the consumer is only interested in HD-2.
Three suggestions that could potentially turn this thing around. So much for playing code jockey. I hate reverse engineering firmware because de-compiling comes out with generic variables and function names. But at least now my HD-2 decode is less than half a second on one radio. Anybody can put up with that!
That's just silly. AM stereo is beyond over. Consumers didn't care back in the early 80's, they're certainly not going to care now.
Change a few things in your sentence and it fits HD exactly.
The consistent item is AM. Consumers don't care about AM. They were done with it by the time AM stereo was being offered, and they're WAY over it now. My favorite comment about AM stereo was "Who wants stereo static?" No one. Get rid of the static and interference, and you might get some interest. Make it standard equipment, and consumers might try it. Otherwise, they moved on 30 years ago.
I agree with clean it up but disagree that it's on the way out.
You can believe whatever you want, but the fact is that AM usage has been declining since 1977, and it's about 20% now.
Well considering the multiple ways you can listen to radio nowadays: satellite, online, FM, SW, that's actually pretty good isn't it? And someone here has said it's more like 40%.
There is slight merit in the suggestion, based on satellite which was probably rescued from bankruptcy by Howard Stern. But - satellite actually WORKS. HD does NOT. At least not very well.
There are some things they could do to increase reliability:
(1) Fall back to C-Quam for AM and rename it AM HD-2.
(2) Give up on RDS and other auxiliary services and move the sidebands back into the channel on FM. From a little bit of reverse engineering on the code, it looks to me like it will decode the HD sidebands wherever they are located.
(3) The radio firmware should be re-written to detect when a consumer tunes directly to HD-2, bypassing the analog / HD-1 - and delete the need for delay. It looks to me like the algorithm to synchronize with analog is what is taking all the time, it is comparative fast to lock onto the digital sidebands. So there is no need to synchronize if the consumer is only interested in HD-2.
Three suggestions that could potentially turn this thing around. So much for playing code jockey. I hate reverse engineering firmware because de-compiling comes out with generic variables and function names. But at least now my HD-2 decode is less than half a second on one radio. Anybody can put up with that!
I'm forgetful as all get out so I don't remember where Bruce is, but he may have terrain issues as well. I've found HD on FM to be particularly persnickety if there's any kind of obstruction between me and the transmit site. Due to the low power levels it's also more susceptible to local RF issues. I get great HD reception… in my bathroom. But in my bedroom office where the computer and electronics and internet comes in, etc.? Much more difficult to maintain a steady reception situation. Apparently that wall between the computers/electronics and the bathroom is all the help the HD needs to blast through clearly.
Of course, this all goes out the window if a station has upgraded to a higher power HD broadcast. I have one station in my area that does (WKSJ) this and another over in Pensacola (WUWF) and in their respective 60 dBu areas, the HD is surprisingly solid. In fact, WUWF's HD consistently outperforms their analog on the fringes, at least when sitting still. And in Pensacola itself, their HD is dropout-free on my little Insignia portable. Which, when you consider the antenna is the headphone wire, and it's inside a moving car, is quite a feat.