Re: "Black Friday Special" and "WIFI radios"
Ok now I'm pretty close to the last guy you will ever see sticking up for IBOC, but there are a lot more stand alone "HD" radios available than stand alone WIFI radios.
Let's look at the comparison.
In the home or work.
HD available? - Yes in larger markets. Minimum amount spent to receive it. $174.99 after rebate at Radio Shack (If available) or 174.99 including shipping at Radioshack.com. Not very well promoted, but widely avaialable from a well known dealer network. Fact is, if you look they're pretty easy to get from a readily available source.
WIFI Ip available - Yes if you have a wireless router and a broadband connection. Broadband is probably more widely available than HD radio signals, But WIFI? I'm not real sure there. Cheapest "Radio" I've seen is $299 Inc. shipping. That's the A-E. This english unit does run on 110V AC, however uses a directory service from
http://reciva.com . This site appears to be down. If so, does the product even work with a directory? Also don't forget the wireless router. Add one for $59.95 if you don't have one. (And be a partial geek to get it to work.) Conversely, you can get IP radio on your computer with everything you have. Not real portable, but still gettable.
How about in the car. They tell me HD radios are available as aftermarket in cars. I've never seen one, but read about those who have them. I'm sure Crutchfield has them, but in fairness "Crutchfield isn't Radio SHack" when it comes to being everywhere. I would put them closer to "Hard to find" than Radio Shack. Still if you want it, it's out there. I'd give HD a big advantage over IP RADIO in the car. Although I can use my Sprint card, mp3 transmitter and FM radio to hear Internet in the car. That's $60 a month for the Sprint card, $1200 worth of computer and stuff and it still doesn't work in the country. I'm thinking you still have to give the edge to HD in the car.
Let's face it. IBOC is bad technology that the existing broadcasters love because they get "Extra channels". TV got extra channels. Cable got extra channels. IP radio got LOTS of extra channels. And now AM & FM want extra channels. (OK AM doesn't get any, but they get better sound.)
The whole thing should have gone with a variation of Eureka 147 or a giant "regional data stream capable of handling several hundred streams at the same time. But the Big FM's didin't want to give parity to the small FM's and AM's and the Smaller FM's and AM's didn't want parity with the internet guys and no one wanted to let their AIR PRODUCT be their soldier in the war for the cash!!