WPPCProductions said:Hi all.did any of you catch this out of Radio Magazine.
http://radiomagonline.com/currents/prometheus-hdradio-10-debunk-0720/?cid=072009
Chuck said:You could also publish an article called "Debunking Radio Magazine." They appear to be more of a propaganda piece for HD radio than any other trade publication.
DavidEduardo said:Chuck said:You could also publish an article called "Debunking Radio Magazine." They appear to be more of a propaganda piece for HD radio than any other trade publication.
You are thinking of Radio World, a real magazine with a print and online edition. Radio "Magazine" is a considerably smaller publication... I have not seen an edition come through for a loooong time.
Savage said:There used to be a print version - we'd get about 6 copies of every issue, free circulation, no subscription - but they bagged that some time in 2009, IIRC. It had shrunk to virtually nothing. The last print issue I recall had about six display ads in it. I believe Radio Magazine is the descendant of the old Broadcast Engineering, a fine magazine in its day.
Chuck said:Nope, not Radio World. It is Radio Magazine. I get it every month, and have for years. http://radiomagonline.com/
Maybe your subscription lapsed.
DavidEduardo said:But, OMG, it is really hard to separate truth from all the fiction, hyperbole and hate on this subject in order to make a real decision.
DavidEduardo said:In any case, the article mentioned showed some major faults in the Prometheus study and obliquely demonstrated that the problem in evaluating HD is that there is so much disinformation (a long thread on whether BMW's have standard floo mats) being tossed about that the real issues and, if any, benefits, are being ignored.
KB1OKL said:I found out some more information from a member of the NRC about the border blaster XELO who had been included in the NMSU XELO tour which is outlined in a Wiki entry although it turns out to be not entirely correct.
DavidEduardo said:KB1OKL said:I found out some more information from a member of the NRC about the border blaster XELO who had been included in the NMSU XELO tour which is outlined in a Wiki entry although it turns out to be not entirely correct.
The Wiki entry is almost entirely wrong in fact. For example, the statement that XEROK was the highest rated Top 40 station in the US "except for possibly WABC" is totally wrong. WABC was not even close to being the highest rated... in the '75 to '77 period where XEROK averaged an 11 share WABC averaged a 7 share... but many other stations in the format did much better, including the average 28 share for WBBQ in Augusta.
I give all this detail because it shows that all the statements in the Wiki article are questionable.
The article says that the (daytime Spanish) format moved to 1060 in 1972, but fails to mention that the party that obtained the license for 1060 in El Paso had operated XELO! The contract with the owner of the license in Mexico was to run out, and he did not want to renew. Even after his death inside the transmitter, his "sucesión" ("heirs" in English) followed his wishes and did not renew... a significant action in that it was cause for finding a new operator (what we call an LMA today) who could take advantage of the big night signal.
Another possible error is the reference to a CCA 150 kw transmitter... unless it was custom built, CCA did not have such a model.
The most amusing part of the Wiki entry is the reference to asking about a "proof of performance" when, of course XELO was a Mexican station and the FCC mandated pop is a strictly US construct, neither required at the time nor observed by Mexican stations which obeyed SCT/SCOP regulations of their own.
Savage said:HD. Touted endlessly as the "savior of AM radio."
TheBigA said:Savage said:HD. Touted endlessly as the "savior of AM radio."
Yep...now there is no savior.