DavidEduardo said:
I am somewhat associated with KRCD/KRCV in LA, a simulcast. We use RDS for the AF function, and my car's factory radio can be seen switching from 98.3 to 103.9 as I drive around the market area... of course, I have the HD part turned off so it may be either/or, and maybe I'll check that over the holidays.
David, do you know if anyone keeps a list of car models sold in the US that come equipped with AF-enabled RDS radios? I was told by one of our translator listeners that the 2009 Buick Lucerne is among them, but would also like to know which model you have. Anyone else with factory RDS/AF, please chime in. My aftermarket Blaupunkt "Alaska" had this feature, but developed other problems, so I had to put the old factory radio back in.
I became an early believer in RDS after reading a paper that Dietmar Kopitz of the EBU presented at the 1986 NAB show, then saw an RDS encoder on display at the 1991 AES show and decided it was time to get on board. Funny story:
In 1992, I took an attractive offer to work for a locally-owned FM station, and shortly after taking the new job, the manufacturer whom I had met at AES loaned me an RDS box for a long-term demo, which became an outright gift. Our station owner (who hadn't seen RDS before) loved the concept of displaying the station name and PAD on a radio --although, in those days, there were very few receivers in the US market. However, we left the RDS signal on the air through the '90s (why not?) and we were the first local station to send dynamic title and artist data by radiotext, beginning around 1995. We were also first station in our market with a local website, as well as the first to stream -- so we added a "now playing" box on the home page.
In 2000, a "consolidator" bought the station -- a publicly-traded company which at that time had very little experience with the Internet -- and as far as I know, none of their other stations were running RDS. I offered to help in both areas and asked if the corporate office would like to "borrow" our webmaster for a few days -- but, no --
they were our new bosses and didn't want help from underlings at the local level. Fortunately, they let us do our thing for a while -- but a few years later, as the company sunk into financial hardship, they cut the budget for maintenance of the web site, killed the streaming, and told me to take off the RDS. I objected to that (after all, the RDS encoder didn't cost anything to run) and managed to leave it on until I left the company in 2005.
So about four years ago, someone at a high corporate level finally realized that RDS and the web stream might be valuable to listeners, then suddenly there was a big rush to get all the stations on line and become "interactive". And now, if RDS goes off the air, it's a big deal! Hey, I tried to tell them...
It costs so little these days to buy (or build) an RDS box that stations of any size should be able to afford one. Unlike HD Radio, there are no licensing fees, no interference issues, and receiver penetration is significantly greater (it's even supported by the iPod Nano). And, the RDS PS display allows for eight alphanumeric characters, rather than the four-letter limit imposed by HD.