Re: Digital Radio Wobbles Around the World
I think you and I are reading different articles Inspector, this is a direct quote from the article:
Chief executive Fru Hazlitt said digital "was not an economically viable growth platform for GCap Media".
Here is another article more critical of DAB in the UK although the same characters as in the first: BBC and 4 digital group are still pro-DAB at the end of the story, but lots of critical stuff, looks like it's not doing any better over there than here and the UK is a small country prone to try out all the new fads which explains the 10% vs the .01% here. (or 1 out of every 10,000 people of the population here own an HD radio. This means there are 1.5 HD radios in my town, or about 18 in Worcester, MA, 2nd largest city in new England.
Q&A: DAB Digital radio
DAB Digital radio is being portrayed in some quarters as the 21st century's version of Betamax, the video format that lost out to VHS in the 1970s.
The government has not committed to any switchover date:
"Only a minuscule number of cars in the UK have a DAB radio installed.
This alone may have convinced the government that the country is not yet ready for a switchover to digital radio, of a type seen in the planned switchover to digital television."
Digital radio just ain't making it anywhere.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7238768.stm
clouseau said:I'll give you that this article does not speak particularly well of DAB, but it's not an article ABOUT DAB. It's about a radio company closing a couple of stations because they aren't making enough money and trying to spin it to their stockholders. What do you expect the company to say, "We've been having problems selling advertising, so we're ditching the stations we are all going to migrate to in favor of a broadcast format the government has already decided to turn off?"
I'll bet not. You talk about propaganda... And 10% of listening in the UK is with DAB? Is that a bad thing? They are actually doing the Digital thing right over there, unlike here. (Yes I'm a Eureka 147 fan)
Over there the Gov't has actually committed to a conversion date, I believe.
Clouseau
I think you and I are reading different articles Inspector, this is a direct quote from the article:
Chief executive Fru Hazlitt said digital "was not an economically viable growth platform for GCap Media".
Here is another article more critical of DAB in the UK although the same characters as in the first: BBC and 4 digital group are still pro-DAB at the end of the story, but lots of critical stuff, looks like it's not doing any better over there than here and the UK is a small country prone to try out all the new fads which explains the 10% vs the .01% here. (or 1 out of every 10,000 people of the population here own an HD radio. This means there are 1.5 HD radios in my town, or about 18 in Worcester, MA, 2nd largest city in new England.
Q&A: DAB Digital radio
DAB Digital radio is being portrayed in some quarters as the 21st century's version of Betamax, the video format that lost out to VHS in the 1970s.
The government has not committed to any switchover date:
"Only a minuscule number of cars in the UK have a DAB radio installed.
This alone may have convinced the government that the country is not yet ready for a switchover to digital radio, of a type seen in the planned switchover to digital television."
Digital radio just ain't making it anywhere.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7238768.stm