Savage said:Well, I didn't mean the report as "doom and gloom," Lino. I had just made a statement earlier in the thread that HD Radios, from my experience, were largely unavailable in my local area. RF Burns countered that he had checked inventory online and that Accurians were indicated as "in-stock" at two local Shacks. So, respecting RF's information, I ventured out to update the situation as I had encountered it last fall, promising to report back, which I did.
It was just a narrative of what I found when I went HD shopping. If the situation had brightened appreciably I would have so reported. But the reverse was true. HD Radio is just not on the retail radar screen. The four locations I visited had made a minimal and unenthusiastic gesture towards stocking HD gear....or, to be more accurate, three had and one (Circuit City) was apparently ignoring HD entirely.
As I said, on the positive side, the digital performance of the Sony tabletop unit was impressive on WHAM - but that was the best of best-case scenarios, with a better-quality HD Radio tuned to a 50kw station whose tower was 5 miles away. And the unit is just not realistically priced for mass acceptance. Nobody's going to pay $200 for "a radio" these days.
Bob, the description of your shopping trip was pretty good - and it brought more than a few chuckles. Basically, this has been my experience too - except that I have yet to see a store display for HD Radio that actually allowed you to hear a station in HD: AM or FM. I did buy an Insignia bookshelf unit and it works pretty well, though it's reception of HD stations is limited to local (very strong) FM stations only. Then again, I am a radio geek and will put up with the inconvenience of having an extra antenna hooked to it. The average consumer just won't go through the trouble to find an affordable unit and to set it up in a manner which actually allows it to work.
LinoNYC said:As oft-happens I can best you in the doom and gloom.
Last Sunday: Circuit City east 86th st Sony hd set on one of two shelves with radios and stereos, none playing, no antennas on Sony (or any), -no public interest.
The "radio" section is tucked opposite the CD section another ghost area.
Best Buy again east 86th (huge site of former HMV which had performance space)
Master antenna (fm) no signal on any of the sets, it's been that way for over a year. Line amp off? Antenna disconnected, whatever, no one cares.
Ofcourse no AM loop, but both stores are in huge recent high-rises so it would not matter.
One positive note, the Rat Shack where I bought mine has the sets near the window thus if someone bothers to untangle the antennas they'll get both AM and FM iboc. Oddly, the AM works there quite well.
The bigger issue: radio is not what is "happening" anymore. No one pays any attention to the large Sat-radio displays either. Internet radio? Yeah right.
It's all about "personal media' today.
A somewhat sad Lino
Lino, your description of the HD Radio displays in Manhattan is even more disturbing because that's the place where this new technology should really be available in abundance....and clearly it's not.
It's to the point that I rarely buy a radio from a brick and mortar store (the above described HD radio being an important exception) because the selection of all radios is terrible at most stores. And, I happened upon my unit at a Best Buy in Nashua, NH where it was set up so that you could use the analog FM, but HD didn't penetrate the building. It was enough to sell me because the unit was the right size and had the right features (CD, FM, MP3, DVD, HD, etc.) and was the right size to fit our needs. The price was good too.
But, the emphasis is now clearly on personal audio and video. And, there is no public interest. Certainly not among the young people who work at retailers like Best Buy, Circuit City and RS. Frankly, it's why I get frustrated with the constant pursuit of lower and lower demos by radio stations. Because a growing number of listeners are older and are becoming disenfranchised. And, for everyone else, you need to make radio easy or it won't be used. HD Radio isn't easy - you have to go out of your way to make it work. People won't do that. It's one reason why all of these HD station spots are the present equivalent of throwing good money after bad. Until the end user experience improves (a lot), this technology is a turkey.