KB1OKL said:I bought a brandy new Sony flat screen HD TV 4 or 5 years ago, hooked it up as I already had satellite and the picture didn't look any different to me so I called them and found out I had to pay extra for HD, I thought forget it. I waited a few years until it was mandatory called again and again was told that I had to pay extra for it even though it was now forced on us. I laughed in their face and gave the TV to my ex-wife. I have seen HD at my father's house and had to ask him if the show was in HD or not, it was, I did not see much difference at all. I have come to see that HD TV is pretty much the same as HD radio: not much of a difference and a huge waste of time, they are both money makers for the industry (although the only people really making money from HD radio is ibiquity) and not much more, there is no benefit for the consumer at all. Here I am, I don't watch TV or very rarely and it's not on my own TV and my HD tuner is gathering dust in a storage space, so much for the ballyhooed digital revolution!
No offense, but you either had a defective TV, tuner or eyes if you didn't notice the difference between a true HD picture and basic analog or 480i. The difference is not just night and day, it's night and Jupiter.
I can even tell with 100% accuracy when I'm watching an HD program downconverted to be viewable on my old analog-only tube TV and when it's coming off cable, it's such a humongous difference.
Unfortunately I too have stopped watching a lot of TV. I became a total HD snob until I moved back to Alabama and into a home with no view of the southern sky. I can say with no uncertainty our local city-run cable company's 25 downrezzed and fuzzy HD channels are a pale comparison to that offered by my beloved DirecTV, for practically the same amount of money. No sky view = no DirecTV. And the PQ is so bad I don't even bother anymore.
But this isn't an HDTV forum, it's a radio forum.
To keep it sort of on topic, my fanaticism about HDTV is not all that uncommon (you can tell who has HDTV and who doesn't: if they say their new HDTV looks poor or no different, they're not smart enough to subscribe to HD service.) Digital radio, of whatever form in whatever country, simply does not have that kind of attraction or attract that sort of snobbery.
No one is clamoring to sample XM or Sirius or DAB+ in Australia against traditional FM broadcasts. The few who buy for the niche programming either complain about sound quality (satellite radio) or lack of coverage (HD). The only way digital broadcasts are really gonna take off is either a) by being mandated or b) developing that "oh wow" cache. And it ain't gonna happen with iBiquity's scheme.