If they did this, everyone would have to go out and buy new receivers or get digital adapters as many had to do with the TV transition. Of course the reason the TV digital switch was mandated was that the FCC compressed the TV band and reclaimed much of the old bandwidth for other purposes. And look at the mess it made - lousy reception, converter boxes and few portable units available at the present time. Radio kept its existing bandwidth, hence no reason to mandate a wholesale change. The main problem with radio HD is that no one sees the need for it. The additional channels are nice, but not necessary. The fidelity on FM is mostly degraded, not enhanced (yes, multipath interference goes away, but you may or may not get reliable HD reception in those areas). On AM, the fidelity is greatly improved, but at the expense of coverage area. And forget about reliably capturing even local AM HD at night.MattParker said:If the FCC had really wanted to save radio, they would have ....
Expanded the FM band by taking over VHF channels five and six when analog TV shut down.
Shut down AM radio.
Go to all digital FM broadcasting like they did with TV.
Require all receiver sold in the US be digital receivers (like they did with UHF television).
Government programming content mandates will benefit no one in this situation and being that no new bandwidth is involved, the government has no reason to exert content control. If there's an economically viable model for HD programming, stations will find it on their own. If not, the technology will fail to catch on.Require that stations program sub-channels separately from the main channel with unique and distinct programming (like they did with FM).
This makes sense and is what's happening now. Some signals may be limited by interference to others, but most should be able to benefit. Stations also have to be careful not to bludgeon their own analog signals in the process.Increase the power for digital signals to give dependable full metro market area coverage.
You've got that right. But at least terrestrial radio can back out of HD and restore the primacy of their analog signals while exploiting the internet and smart phones. When the FCC gets done screwing with the internet and satellite radio there may be no going back.Savage said:Good old hard-sell hype and promotion, lobbied through an FCC which is far more interested in pushing loopy policy agendas these days than technical excellence which actually protects the public's listening experience. The lawyers have taken over and overwhelmed the engineers who historically have served as America's electromagnetic-spectrum traffic cops and investigators.
The C. Crane radio is good as are the lower cost Grace standalones and their tuner which is under $100. That's real variety, and if you've already got broadband internet, a web radio is also 'free' without the reception issues and the limited formats.Want choice? Go to www.ccrane.com and pick up a C Crane Wi-Fi for around $149. One of my employees got one and brought it in for us to play with. It sounds very good, reception is rock-steady when locked and the build quality is excellent - it's a standalone radio offering 22,000 choices.
Definitely. There has to be compelling programming to even think about spending more money for a replacement radio, and since HD isn't standard in most cars, people have to jump through hoops to get it. People don't see a reason to do it. If HD becomes standard in cars (or easily available for no more than a token price premium) and the reception issues are cleared up, people might get to hear HD. But if there's no programming advantage, that's as far as people's HD exposure will go.rtetro said:The key issue, as I see it, {with FM HD} is and will continue to be programming. If the programming isn't there, why invest capital in the technology?
Maybe in an automobile or when there's a multipath situation on the analog signal (and the digital is receivable), but otherwise, I have to disagree. The best digital FM channels sound like the 96k webstreams that they are, relatively clean but flat with no depth and a superficial soundstage. AM HD improves the sound quality remarkably, but the problems with AM reception remain and are worse with digital.FM-HDR definitely sounds better than analog FM... even in the less than perfect listening envirornment of an automobile.
Exactly. When I'm doing resource-rich things on the computer, winamp is sometimes too much of a hog, slowing things down. A dedicated wifi radio and an FM transmitter put a reliable programming stream into the whole house without burdening the computer. The only restriction is with stations that don't have an alternative to their Flash players. That's still a problem, and the result is that I'm less likely to listen to the stations I can't get on the Wifi radio.as one who owns four internet radios, I find the arguments to just use one's computer a little naive. Like any software program, listening to internet radio on your pc or laptop uses valuable resources and slows things down on less than ideal computers.
I assume you're preaching to the industry now. When I'm in listener mode, its all audio entertainment, and the content is far more important than where its coming from. I don't really care if I'm listening to a web-only stream, an AM easy listening station, a deep tracks album rocker out of Vermont or Colorado, or a playlist on my hard drive. It's the programming I'm after. If I can get it everywhere I want it, that's what's important to me, the listener. And that's where radio has to be.That aside, we need to stop thinking of internet radio as just another add-on or feature on your computer. Instead, we need to start thinking of it as another "radio band" of sorts. There's AM, FM, Satellite and now internet Radio.
musichead1029 said:Exactly. When I'm doing resource-rich things on the computer, winamp is sometimes too much of a hog, slowing things down. A dedicated wifi radio and an FM transmitter put a reliable programming stream into the whole house without burdening the computer. The only restriction is with stations that don't have an alternative to their Flash players. That's still a problem, and the result is that I'm less likely to listen to the stations I can't get on the Wifi radio.
aindik said:Which is why the Wifi radio is a niche device without a niche. If you want to listen to internet radio without using a computer, and you don't have and don't want a smartphone, the most useful thing you can buy to do that is an iPod Touch or an iPad.
MattParker said:You mean, iPOS. There are far better mobile media devices. The iPOS devices are flashy but flawed. They are over-priced and the data plans required for them are over-priced.
MattParker said:Do your homework.
MattParker said:If WinAmp slows down your computer, sounds like it's time for a new computer. If you computer is fairly news, sounds like you should have more RAM.
MattParker said:Play with it for 29 days and you can chose to cancel your contract and return the item.