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Biggest CES Flops of All Time

Casey said:
Cumulus and Clear Channel simply never bothered with HD and they own nearly every commercial station in the market. Clear Channel does operate the service on an AM station, but they never turned it on for their FM's.

That's really unusual; it's been Clear Channel, Cumulus and other big name radio companies that have pushed HD along with NPR.

In my market, it's ONLY CC and Cumulus who're running HD in the commercial band. Luckily we are free of any AM HD except from WWL New Orleans.
 
I use Minidiscs too. Pretty handy for recording Navtex data when I can't stream it directly from the radio into the laptop!

"Does anybody remember DIVX videodiscs? I never had DIVX, and I'm glad I didn't."

Yes. In fact, the Goodwill nearest me currently is in possession of a cardboard box containing someone's collection of about 100+ DIVX (not to be confused with the similarly-named "DivX") discs, priced $1 each. That box of discs has been there since late October. Alas, no player in sight.

@Zach--
CD-i's biggest market, at least on this side of the Atlantic, was distribution of background music for businesses, i.e. Muzak and AEI/DMX. Karaoke discs actually use CD+Graphics, which is a derivative of CD-i but a different format. Muzak stopped sending out CD-I programming around 2005 and DMX in January 2008, almost 10 years after Philips' last CD-I player rolled off their assembly line!
 
Darth_vader said:
I use Minidiscs too. Pretty handy for recording Navtex data when I can't stream it directly from the radio into the laptop!

"Does anybody remember DIVX videodiscs? I never had DIVX, and I'm glad I didn't."

Yes. In fact, the Goodwill nearest me currently is in possession of a cardboard box containing someone's collection of about 100+ DIVX (not to be confused with the similarly-named "DivX") discs, priced $1 each. That box of discs has been there since late October. Alas, no player in sight.

@Zach--
CD-i's biggest market, at least on this side of the Atlantic, was distribution of background music for businesses, i.e. Muzak and AEI/DMX. Karaoke discs actually use CD+Graphics, which is a derivative of CD-i but a different format. Muzak stopped sending out CD-I programming around 2005 and DMX in January 2008, almost 10 years after Philips' last CD-I player rolled off their assembly line!

Did those old Divx video disc's at the time go blank after a viewed movie.one shot deal.
 
I wouldn't consider some of these flops at all. I still use the infamous MiniDisc WEEKLY, and you know what - not one has failed on me since my first one in 1999 - can you say that about the cassette format it replaced? Compact, superb audio codec, very NON-MP3 sounding - and barely noticable difference than an actual CD. Eraseable, on the fly edits, text, inexpensive media, no computer required - one of the best items Sony ever devised. Not a flop in my book. IT WORKS - can you say the same about AM-HD and it's neighbors on the dial.

Same for the original LaserVision VideoDiscs - they worked and had great audio and video. Sony's OLE TV's are spectacular, they work, but just too expensive; however, the OLE screens have made inroads on small portable units where they ARE cost effective and they work.

So, you have to define 'flop'. Is satellite radio a 'flop' as ONLY 20 million folks are paying for it? DVD-HD's - a flop? Some of the best (or better) technology is considered a flop, but when it works, it works well, so I consider "C-QUAM AM Stereo" a 'non-flop' as it worked, worked well, forced better AM tuners onto the market and AMAX would be the standard for all AM radios IF the FCC would have made a standard in 1982 instead of 1992.
The success of HD radio, and AM radio in general, is unique, compelling progarmming, niche formats and local programming - offer for 'free' on a radio what people want - without a $65 bill every month for their 3G cellphone or internet access. Great progamming on a portable radio that runs on a 9Volt battery never went out of style with me, or even my teens - when it's something that they really want to hear (even Radio Disney, I hate to admit).
 
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