S
SayNoToIBOC
Guest
"HD is DOA"
http://heartsofspace.typepad.com/spatialrelations/2006/07/index.html
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June 09, 2006
"Only 1% Of 18-64-Year-Olds Say HD Radio Provides More Stations Or Programming Choices"
More proof (as if any were needed) that Ibiquity and broadcasters supporting IBOC/HD have done an absolutely terrible job of promoting it and its purported benefits to the public.
Often IBOC/HD supporters draw an analogy to FM radio and how long it took for FM to be embraced by the American public. But that analogy is misleading and incorrect in this case. Back when FM was striving for public acceptance, its main competition was only AM radio, especially for mobile audio entertainment (car radios, transistor radios, etc.). Today there are numerous alternatives for mobile audio entertainment (such as MP3 players and satellite radio) and additional alternatives that will soon be coming on-line (cellphonecasting, mobile broadband, etc.). It's as if Ibiquity and IBOC/HD supporters think of their competition as only analog AM/FM, and haven't fully grasped how many new competitors are racing toward them from different directions.
It may be, as the linked article above claims, "early in the marketing of HD radio." But IBOC/HD has so far failed to attract even a fraction of the interest that, say, satellite radio managed to attract in a comparable amount of time. Ibiquity and IBOC/HD supporters need to understand their "window of opportunity" is probably measured in months, not years; if significant progress is not made in increasing public awareness of, and interest in, IBOC/HD within the next few months, then IBOC/HD will be stillborn.
http://heartsofspace.typepad.com/spatialrelations/2006/07/index.html
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 09, 2006
"Only 1% Of 18-64-Year-Olds Say HD Radio Provides More Stations Or Programming Choices"
More proof (as if any were needed) that Ibiquity and broadcasters supporting IBOC/HD have done an absolutely terrible job of promoting it and its purported benefits to the public.
Often IBOC/HD supporters draw an analogy to FM radio and how long it took for FM to be embraced by the American public. But that analogy is misleading and incorrect in this case. Back when FM was striving for public acceptance, its main competition was only AM radio, especially for mobile audio entertainment (car radios, transistor radios, etc.). Today there are numerous alternatives for mobile audio entertainment (such as MP3 players and satellite radio) and additional alternatives that will soon be coming on-line (cellphonecasting, mobile broadband, etc.). It's as if Ibiquity and IBOC/HD supporters think of their competition as only analog AM/FM, and haven't fully grasped how many new competitors are racing toward them from different directions.
It may be, as the linked article above claims, "early in the marketing of HD radio." But IBOC/HD has so far failed to attract even a fraction of the interest that, say, satellite radio managed to attract in a comparable amount of time. Ibiquity and IBOC/HD supporters need to understand their "window of opportunity" is probably measured in months, not years; if significant progress is not made in increasing public awareness of, and interest in, IBOC/HD within the next few months, then IBOC/HD will be stillborn.