Just to claify C5, that info is from The Communicator which is a newsletter/service provided by Bob Gonsett of Communications General Corp. in Fallbrook, CA. The archives are stored by Bext
TheBigA said:Savage said:But the problem is: there are no listeners largely because the technology is so flawed.
The listeners don't care about the technology. The issue is requiring them to buy new radios, most of which are stupid table models that no one but grandparents buy. If HD was available for free on all radios, with no additional hoops to jump through, more people would listen, even if the programming sucked. While turning the channels over to independent programmers would make a nice press release, it wouldn't make a difference.
pocket-radio said:"The listeners don't care about the technology."
Oh but they do care very much, 2 million ipads were sold in 2 months! They care a whole lot.. They care if it's cool and captures their heart and imagination.
pocket-radio said:It makes no sense because you underestimate the power of marketing and a thing called desire. 2 million ipads were sold in 2 months!
pocket-radio said:"If HD was available for free on all radios, with no additional hoops to jump through, more people would listen, even if the programming sucked."
More people would listen? 238 million already listen to AM/FM radio.
More people won't listen to radio, that's a fantasy, instead the audience we have will become fractured over countess format choices and stations. It's not good!
Chuck said:NPR plans to be the distributor of that content, bypassing their affiliate stations.
Chuck said:Just today, one of their own people went on record saying, “The Internet will replace terrestrial radio.”
Two things about that. She specifically said that the stations are the "lifeblood" of NPR.
Zach said:I dunno, I think NPR IS bypassing the affiliates. Look at all the audio on demand available from their website, and from NPR/PRI/APR/whoever else that produces the individual shows.
TheBigA said:pocket-radio said:"The listeners don't care about the technology."
Oh but they do care very much, 2 million ipads were sold in 2 months! They care a whole lot.. They care if it's cool and captures their heart and imagination.
You're changing the subject. Savage says the reason why no one buys HD is because the technology is flawed. Then you bring up the iPad. There are lots of flawed aspects to the iPad, including the lack of Flash. Still people buy it. That's why I say the people don't care about technology, either in HD Radio OR the iPad.
pocket-radio said:It makes no sense because you underestimate the power of marketing and a thing called desire. 2 million ipads were sold in 2 months!
There you go again, bringing up the iPad. You're comparing a computer and a radio. Tell me about an AM/FM radio that people are rushing out to buy. That is comparing oranges to oranges.
You can't just bring up something unrelated that's selling, and use that as some kind of example why something else is not selling. That's ignoring the real issue.
pocket-radio said:"If HD was available for free on all radios, with no additional hoops to jump through, more people would listen, even if the programming sucked."
More people would listen? 238 million already listen to AM/FM radio.
More people won't listen to radio, that's a fantasy, instead the audience we have will become fractured over countess format choices and stations. It's not good!
Now you're just being dense. I said if it was just as accessible as AM/FM, then those 238 million would also listen to HD. They can't because HD isn't as accessible. It requires someone to buy a new radio. And people, for the most part, aren't buying new radios.
Zach said:The fact of the matter is FM took off when new music was taking off, and we haven't had new music in decades. There simply isn't anything new or different to latch the HD wagon to like there was with FM. There is only offering existing formats to a wider (ha) audience.
Savage said:FM was never considered an "annoyance" in the manner HD is today. True, until the late 60s some managers ignored FM co-owned properties - not unlike the way cluster-Veeps ignore their AM stations today - but they weren't regarded as "annoyances" in most cases.
Once WOR-FM and a handful of others launched mass-appeal formats on FM in 1966 - this was after the FCC ordered 100% simulcasting of AMs to cease - everyone saw the potential and started upgrading and developing their FMs.
Seven or eight years later, most of the music formats had migrated to FM and the writing was on the wall.
DavidEduardo said:Zach said:The fact of the matter is FM took off when new music was taking off, and we haven't had new music in decades. There simply isn't anything new or different to latch the HD wagon to like there was with FM. There is only offering existing formats to a wider (ha) audience.
FM took off, after nearly 30 years, when the FCC prohibited simulcasts.
Savage said:FWIW - take it from somebody who was there in 1966-67 when FM stations weren't even included in ratings summaries (Arbitron, then called "ARB" for Audience Research Bureau, used to issue a supplemental pamphlet titled "FM Stations" to accompany their Ratings Estimates.)
Tom Wells said:AND when enough cars had been purchased with FM, and these became used cars, and/or FM converters were marketed.
DuckBlue said:Mr. Rhodes states, "But many of the stations I'm listening to on HD are playing MP3s instead of higher-quality .WAV files, making the difference in sound less noticeable." Does he believe that the HD codecs are lossless? I would think that HD corrupts the signal much more than say a 192k mp3 compression ever would. Does anyone know how they compare?
kc0ltv said:2. The quality of the HD-2 and HD-3 subchannels varies from station to station. Duluth doesn't have many HD subchannels, so I will use Minneapolis and surrounding area stations, which I receive on most summer nights, as examples. KQDS-HD2 sounds good, like a 64k MP3; KXXR-HD2 sounds like a 32k WMA stream (definitely a noticeable degradation from analog); when they were running both HD-2 and HD-3, WGMO's HD2 (The River 94.7 A/C) sounded like crap (in addition, there was analog noise on it, so probably a weak STL) and its HD3 (Talk Radio Network) sounded like a 24k or 32k WMA stream (not bad for talk); now that they just run HD2, The River's audio quality has improved; KTIS runs HD2 and HD3, and they both sound like 48k or even 64k MP3's;
Tom Wells said:Hey! That's disrespectful to 16mm films.![]()
Play Freebird said:Tom Wells said:Hey! That's disrespectful to 16mm films.![]()
Sorry, I was referring to 16 mm film without Piclear - the scratch-masking fluid which is probably "unobtainium" today.