HDmeltdown said:Carmine5 said:audioguy said:"The only other thing the Alliance can do is start pushing for a sunset of analog broadcasting".
I would not be in favor of that! However, I would support a sunset for Hybrid Digital broadcasting.
Nor would I. And, realistically, I doubt the FCC would accept that idea, at least not for a decade or so. But I can see, in desperation, the Alliance putting it forward.
But your idea of an either/or solution would be a good one.
C5
How can we get to the sunset of analog? Let's see, in 10 years how many digital radios would have to be sold, in order to sunset the estimated 800,000,000 analog radios? Meanwhile, HD radios are being pulled from store shelves and inventories, and digital radio is failing worldwide from lack of consumer interest. iBiquity willl never be able to get past the "hybrid" hump, especially since NPR is against the en-masse 10db FM-HD power increase. Worldwide, consumers have failed to see any cost-benefits to digital radio, and a mandate would not force consumers to buy digital radios. Sorry, but who buys radios anymore? There is no incentive for an HD Radio mandate from the FCC, since there is no spectrum to be auctioned, as in the case of digital TV.
"Get your HD Radio here. Government says your current radio won't work after February 2012."
Wouldn't the Alliance love a forced DTV-style transition for digital radio? Of course, consumers might just say, "hey, I'm already getting my favorite station(s) on my BlueTooth equipped smartphone and laptop, so go ahead but I don't need an HD Radio".
Speaking of auctioning channels, Jeremy Lansman over at KYES-(TV) in Anchorage said in an e-mail that since IBOC splatters outside an FM station's mask, the 10db increase would only spread that splatter even further pushing the digital side bands well into spectrum the station has no right to. He says that, legally, the additional spectrum should be put up for public auction or, at least, the station's analog signal.
What a mess that would make.
C5