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Best Buy Expands HD Radio Lineup

PocketRadio said:
You have to respond, or else we win ! :D

Just declare victory. You'll just make up something else that demonstrates you are totally right. Let me help you out.

"Bush, Clinton and Christ denounce HD radio as the Devil's Work"

http://www.fcc.gov

Don't let reality get in the way.. Go For It!!

Clouseau
 
TheRover said:
In the final analysis, it's what the Baby Boomers want, and not what Gen X, Y, or Z wants. . .

So, time will really tell, what the Boomers want.

You will see.

Flashy big advertising to gen x,y, or z does not in any way change the force that the Baby Boomer Generation is.....

YOU WILL SEE !!

"How to Do an Intervention on Radio"

"The human element — when you have your job downsized, outsourced, combined or replaced by virtual technology you no longer work in an industry conducive to new ideas. In effect you are no longer in a growth industry. Google is a growth company. Todays Clear Channel and CBS are not. Failure to program to the next generation meant losing that generation (Gen Y) to the technology that young listeners have become addicted to (Internet, Wireless, iPods, iTunes, computers, Internet radio, cell phones, peer-to-peer file sharing, social networking to mention only a few). But a worse failure was blaming technology for the loss of the kids. Technology didn’t kill the radio star. Radio consolidation and the programming that resulted from it did."

"And last, but not least (as the old trite phrase goes) the folly of HD Radio. I say folly because HD radio as a savior for the medium is a joke. As an engineering enhancement it’s not a bad upgrade, but it won’t save radio from itself. One reason is because few people care about it. Terrestrial radio dragged its feet on this for years and now its too late. But don’t be guilty. Today’s consumers like convenience, fresh innovative programming — not fidelity. Just watch Gen Y listen to the Internet on their puny computer speakers or enjoy their highly-compressed iPods with low tech ear buds."

http://www.freepress.net/news/20703

Gen Y was to be terrestrial radio's future - seems, as if you don't care.
 
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