autopaint-1 said:
"You apparently totally misunderstand me.
Perhaps you are easy to misunderstand. Email and Internet discussion forums have a way of doing that. My only point is that New York is not typical of the rest of the USA.
autopaint-1 said:
"If you did shut down the “underperforming” stations, how do those owners get compensated for their loss?"Compensation? For what? For a business that goes under? If the station can operate and make a profit running analogue or IBOC then there's no problem.
So what is your basis for getting rid of the "excess" stations? I haven't seen too many stations go dark recently. I'm sure it happens, but it will take an eternity if you wait for natural selection to weed things out.
autopaint-1 said:
If on the other hand they can't, why should the owners be compensated? AM IBOC is a daytime only mode at the moment. NY stations won't interfere with any stations in rural markets due to IBOC.
We'll see. I wouldn't count on AM IBOC being daytime only for too much longer. The publicity that comes from the FCC says that they are getting ready to approve night operation of the system. That should be really interesting. AM is already quite a sewer at night as it stands. I can't see that this will improve the matter, although it may bring the issue into prominence. The lawyers should really like it if the whole thing ends up as a series of legal battles about who is interfering with whom.
autopaint-1 said:
Maybe that's what's needed, but our doing nothing and not making AM viable to anyone under the age of 50 is a pressing matter for today's broadcasters. Young people do not and will not listen to AM radio unless sound quality is improved.
I agree that it would be a good thing to improve the sound quality of AM radio. No argument there. I'd just like to do it the right way the first time. I don't know what that is, but I'm pretty sure the current approach makes more problems than it solves. I also don't buy your argument about "young people." But even if it is the case, who cares? As long as an audience can be found to support the station, there really isn't a big problem. Not everyone can be "number one." Not everyone even wants to be. You can have a nice comfortable business without being the most popular station in town with 13-21 year olds.
autopaint-1 said:
Sounds cruel but this is the cost of doing business in the 21st century. Most of these stations would sell in the millions. This is an expensive industry and you need money to run a successful operation. If you don't have the money you're in the wrong industry.
OK, if most of these stations would sell in the millions, what makes you think the owners wouldn't want to be compensated for their loss, it they were told they could no longer broadcast due to interference issues caused by IBOC (or anything else for that matter)?
autopaint-1 said:
what do you suggest and don't say creative programing because the resources in the analogue world are limited and for instance as of today my I-Pod has over 4600 songs on it, how do you compete with that?
I will say "creative programming," or at least, giving people something they want to hear. The difference between analog and digital in the context we are talking about is merely a modulation method. The only thing a digital transmission method would do for me is give people another way to receive the station. HD won't save me from programming that sucks. In the case of AM broadcasting, HD should sound better than the bandwidth limited signals people are putting out now. The HD demos I’ve heard certainly do, assuming you have a HD capable radio. For those with existing analog radios, the signal generally sounds worse, although many AM radios are so awful, the theory is not too many folks will notice. That's a swell excuse. 10 KHz analog AM can sound pretty good. If you are going to have an industry wide ad campaign to get people to buy new radios, how about having it for high quality radios that actually sound good with existing technology? It doesn’t have to be all that expensive. A GE Super Radio can be bought for less than $40.00 and they sound quite pleasant on a decent AM station. That seems like an easier sell than a $299.00 HD ready radio. I’m confident that the prices for HD radios will go down. The prices always do, but right now, all you have for listeners are early adopters, and the folks who hang out on this news group. It will take several years to get good market penetration. In the case of FM, I doubt that many listeners will notice the sound quality difference between HD and analog, especially in their car. Under some conditions, it may improve (or eliminate) multipath problems, but where I live, that isn’t a huge problem. Admittedly, HD-FM does allow the broadcaster to have secondary channels to compete with his primary channel. Hmmm... I haven't really figured out why I really want that. The NPR guys think it is the greatest thing since sliced bread, but they have a different business model than I do.
autopaint-1 said:
Again, if you live in a small market in a rural area you don't have to worry about IBOC. It's a daytime only mode on AM and by the time it reaches your market technology will have resolved many of today's questions. Living in a NY suburb I have no interference to any other NY station even thoough we have many IBOC signals in our market. Can I hear that first adjacent out of market 250 watt station putting in a wopping .001 MV? Probably not but who cares, it isn't a NY radio station and the onoly ones who care about it going away are DXers and while DXing is a hobby, radio is a business.
From my vantage point, we probably have 5-10 years before we will need to seriously think about purchasing this technology, if we have to at all. For now, it is a spectator sport, although some of the group broadcasters in our area are talking about converting. We’ll see if they actually do it or not. In the mean time, it is interesting to see what works, and what doesn't. I'm glad that I have time on my side. If new radios come out that are compatible with both HD and FMExtra, we might consider going with FMExtra (we're FM) way before thinking about IBOC. Why? Because it is an elegantly simple system that uses existing SCA channels. But more importantly, we could buy the necessary equipment for $8-10,000, which for a small station is fairly affordable. Forgive me for being bottom line oriented, but unless I can see how we'd get our money back by increasing/improving our service to the community, all of these schemes make very little sense to me.