TimeIsTight said:
After all, most of us now carry cell phones most of the time. Is it better to have millions of Americans wandering around without a clue, or for pennies each to allow them to stay informed using digital radio, whether VHF or MW, when the cell network goes down? Like it did in the DC area a few days ago.
Most cell phones already have FM capability - it just isn't turned on. If there needs to be an added chip, it will probably be analog radio, not digital. Sony and SiLabs have the best chips on the market, but it would almost have to be Silabs because it doesn't need inconvenient things like tuning capacitors and RF / IF coils, everything is inside. One chip, hookup up serial communication, audio, antenna - done. Whatever chip goes in there - it needs to be pennies. Anything HD has a huge license fee tacked on - so that millstone around its neck would doom its inclusion in radios. That is probably why the rumored iPhone FM function has never been enable. Apple wanted iTunes tagging, that takes HD, HD requires hefty fees and doesn't work worth a darn anyway, so Apple's business decision was to leave FM off and not pay the fee, fearing that iTunes purchases wouldn't pay for the HD fee in the long run. Smart move. Even smarter would be to enable it in analog mode only, and forego the iTunes tagging in favor of garnering good will with users who want a radio.
The sad fact is that radio listening is declining alarmingly - the smart phones have music players embedded, if you really want radio you can buy an SRF-59 for as low as $12. Or the digital display one for about twice that - SRF-83 I think. Best inexpensive receivers on the market, great for pulling in weak stations - something an cell phone radio wouldn't do anyway. It's a pain to carry a radio, and also carry a phone. But the sad fact is - radio gives what the corporate owners say people want, not what people want. So people revolted long ago for MP3 and iPod. They stream what they don't podcast on smart phones. So if the internet and cell towers go down, they are basically screwed for information.
All digital HD might be marginally better for reception, but I doubt it. Radio was, and still is inherently analog and so many reception scenarios exist that it is impossible to design a robust enough digital system. iBiquity tried and failed. All digital has some potential, but is it enough for AM in light of wi-fi, power lines, light dimmers, poorly designed consumer gear, etc. The ship has sailed for AM, the FCC could have regulated interference problems as they came up. But they did not and now it is too late to clean up the band from all the stuff attacking it.