autopaint-1 wrote on my computer screen:
Where did you even come into this conversation and I've asked you not to repete the laundry list.
What laundry list? I have said nothing here that you do not take most opportunities to remind us about by posting in these message boards which therefore IMPLIES that the rest of us are blithering idiots and that we don't know what we're doing or talking about.
Your cynical attitude especially since I've asked you before makes you look no better than SayNo.
You're darn right I'm cynical. I am annoyed about several things regarding HD/IBOC, not the least of which was that the public never asked for it and it is being rammed down our throats. Yes, yes, I know in the other thread you said:
No one is forcing anyone to do anything. No one forces anyone to listen to the radio at all.
Yes, of course that's right. No one is forcing me to listen to the radio. But we are, in fact, being forced to adapt particularly if analog radio is eventually turned off. The same is true of HDTV. I know, I know... we don't know whether or not these things will ever happen but I do believe that they are part of the master plan. Sunset dates are VERY dangerous and they only serve to alienate a lot of people.
But the broadcasting conglomerates which forged the original alliance that became Ibiquity have barrelled ahead with developing a technology that they were hell-bent on developing regardless of whether or not there were better chips and algorithms in the making. They have paid a LOT of money for other companies NOT to develop superior competing technologies. There is something WRONG with this model of doing business.
However, if traditional broadcasting wishes to remain competitive they will apply new technologies which will make them more attractive to the typical listener.
If traditional broadcasting wishes to remain competitive they will need to start using talented people to produce good programming for listeners again. Somewhere along the way, they forgot how to do that. It seemed to start happening when the atmosphere of deregulation allowed them to slowly converge their properties into large conglomerates and stop using people to create a quality product.
Try to grow up and stop with the foolishness. You may think it funny, so why not list your qualifications and accomplishments so that we all know what you bring to the table.
I bring nothing to the table. I have no qualifications and I have no accomplishments which I care to share here. And yes, to some degree it is really quite funny how many people have so many emotional opinions about this one subject and actually have no real clue as to how we got "here" from "there".
So, back to my original question: Are there absolutely no instances you can think of where installing a landline of any sort for using a telephone/ISDN/Comrex Hotline or two tin cans, etc. to a remote venue will not work?