DaveBayArea said:I think it has more to do with the fact that the FCC makes decisions based on politics, not science and engineering.
I don't see how it has anything to do with politics either. It has to do with regulators choosing not to regulate.
DaveBayArea said:I think it has more to do with the fact that the FCC makes decisions based on politics, not science and engineering.
TheBigA said:I don't see how it has anything to do with politics either. It has to do with regulators choosing not to regulate.
DaveBayArea said:But I was thinking more along the lines that the regulators got where they are not because of their technical proficiency but because of their business/political connections.
SirRoxalot said:I'd be willing to bet that almost EVERYBODY who works at the FCC has political and/or business connections. The only other option would be civil service - and even that isn't politics-free.
TheBigA said:SirRoxalot said:I'd be willing to bet that almost EVERYBODY who works at the FCC has political and/or business connections. The only other option would be civil service - and even that isn't politics-free.
The only political appointees are the Commissioners. The rest is civil service.
Tom Wells said:TheBigA said:SirRoxalot said:I'd be willing to bet that almost EVERYBODY who works at the FCC has political and/or business connections. The only other option would be civil service - and even that isn't politics-free.
The only political appointees are the Commissioners. The rest is civil service.
What is the percentage of engineers?
If there aren't any engineers, the agancy is an operational fraud, and should be disbanded.
RadeoEngineer said:I believe that most if not all of the former engineers at the FCC have retired in disgust and are now doing AM directional array maintenance in the great midwest of our beautiful country. ;D
DaveBayArea said:RadeoEngineer said:I believe that most if not all of the former engineers at the FCC have retired in disgust and are now doing AM directional array maintenance in the great midwest of our beautiful country. ;D
I'm not quite sure that it's that bad, but I do recall that HD Radio was approved during an era when the main FCC-related news story was Janet Jackson's breast. That's hardly engineering-related.
Dave B.
MarioMania said:If no one buying HD Radio's, it would be dead..FCC would have pulled the plug..
But HD is still here in 2011, So people are buying it..If HD is on Low Demand..why is it still here??
diymedia said:Artist experience is the new "killer application." How many killer apps will it take...?
MarioMania said:If no one buying HD Radio's, it would be dead..FCC would have pulled the plug..
But HD is still here in 2011, So people are buying it..If HD is on Low Demand..why is it still here??
Savage said:Okay, let me understand this. Our industry geniuses have concluded that (a) the wonderful new digital quality of HD Radio isn't all that wonderfully better than analog after all, (b) that channels-between-the-channels is apparently underwhelming, and (tympani roll) NOWWW...our latest rationale to get consumers to plunk down $50 to $100 for a new radio ISSSSS....
(Cymbal clash)
A little dashboard display of a station logo, a CD cover or some low-tech TV ads?? ???
Carmine5 said:But for digital signage to work effectively, I would think it needs a full-time person who can set up ads and integrate that with traffic and weather info. And, of course, if it does take a full-time staff person, that may negate any monetary potential for digital signage.
SirRoxalot said:If everybody had RDS delivering that information quickly and succinctly, along with frequency and call letters and/or station name, that would be plenty.
Chuck said:Come to think of it, there aren't many home table radios on the market, period.