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LinoNYC
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Radioman100 said:rbrucecarter5 said:There is the nail in the coffin for IBOC, right there. Not only do you get thousands of stations instead of a dozen or two HD-2 channels (if you have a deep fringe antenna). The ethernet / wireless option effectively captures the listeners in the office. And - the tuner is cheaper than most HD radios.
The marketplace is sure as HEAVEN going to speak. And HD won't be the choice when portable internet radios become widely available.
Nail in the coffin for IBOC? Yeah right!
This entire thread is about a new, reasonably priced shelf system that just happens to include HD Radio. The kind of device that will allow people to discover HD Radio. Do you think they'll just tune right past all the HD stations they encounter on this and all the similar devices that are coming out? If someone's favorite song is playing on an HD2 channel, they'll just tune past it quickly, remembering that they can go out and buy an internet radio appliance?
And do you really think businesses are going to provide bandwidth just for their employee's entertainment? You've obviously never met an average IT guy! They obsess with getting the best performance out of their networks and locking them down to keep things like this from happening. Why would a company want to use their switches, routers and firewalls, not to mention internet bandwidth for actual business when they could use it to power their employee's Bavarian salsa rap fetish? Wireless connection? Forget Sarbanes-Oxley! We have internet radios to power!
Last Wed night I was at my location in Murray Hill, the TV was on and two women seated to my side were blabbing, when a commercial for WLTW came on, it shows these creepy animated characters 'tuning-in" the station via their desktops.
One woman asked the other "do they let you do that" -the other shook her head (no) and said that they had been told to bring a radio or ipod and not to use "company internet".
All of the proponents of internet radio miss two important aspects; the average person can barely setup and operate a standard radio, awful receprtion, out-of-phase speakers and no or wrong antenna are common. Then there is the issue of internet access, even in a major city such as New York, we are a long way from the kind of penetration that standard radio has. Even if "universal" wifi becomes reality, it probably won't be free.
Lino