R.F. Burns said:
Nick said:
The extra HD power yields nothing to the bottom line. Nobody has the HD radios. It's just a waste of electricity at this point. The only advantage the extra HD power has is that it will dissuade pirates from setting up shop on the adjacent frequencies.
Name me one station that has a revenue boost directly attributable to HD. Analog translators don't count. I only know of one HD2 station that appeared in the ratings, but that most likely was its stream since there aren't even enough HD radios that exist in the market to meet the minimum reporting standard.
It's called the cost of doing business. You can't sell something unless there's a product to buy. UHF TV and FM were both busts for many years with stations going out of business or turning in licenses. These aren't mom and pop operations behind HD. Although its implimentaion has been very slow (especially as seen by our short attention span society) HD is making inroads. The ideal would be new spectrum for digital broadcasting but for that you can blame the FCC not broadcasters.
You are so right, RF, but as guilty as any of us for refusing any "solution" that did not come with new spectrum.
Just because the regulating body has lost touch with reality does not mean engineers are free to ignore reality.
In fact it was the job of engineers to make sure that this happened in new spectrum, and I take responsibilty too, for not
somehow having stopped this disastrous experiment in RF pollution.
Yes, I see the existence of ibiquity and HD partly as a personal failure, to have become part of a world that would "allow"
such a thing to happen in an area of my expertise.
Saying HD is imaking inroads is like saying any particular disease is becoming chronic, and that supposed to be a good thing?
You and every other professional engineer should be screaming to the FCC about disrespect for the rules that
that you and many others make a living at. Divide and conquer works easily when it's your living at stake.
This every bit like saying we can all stand a little hepatitis, because it can be "managed" by doctors and will
support a whole new industry of extendend hepatitis care services. See how wacky it sounds in terms of healthcare?
So where was the outcry of engineers when this predictably divisive and intrusive method was first announced?
"Blaming" the FCC has absolutely no result or effect and is a complete waste of time, as they clearly have had no
interest in protecting broadcast radio service spectrum for over 40 years since the "innovation" of lamp dimmers.
The only way HD will die is when it is forgotten and dies of neglect.
Time has a way of sorting out species that are not quite robust enough, or useful enough, or too wacky to breed reliably.
My wife is pretty tech savvy, but absolutely WILL NOT find her way through the menus on her Kenwood HD auto radio.
She hates the menus, and has no idea how to get to the HDs even after explaining. It doesn't stick.
Same way with the tone controls. There's a tuning knob that's not a knob, it's a "wiggler" in 4 directions, none too certain, plus a "straight down" push for some functions that usually results in also picking up one of the side switches, resulting in unitended
operation.
I put the radio in, and when that vehicle "goes away" I'll don't think I'll go to all the bother of taking it out.
What I still hear is the same FM "spitting" I had so much fun discussing with Don Juan.
Pity that I'm in the strongest signal areas, and now FM has more intrusive noises than AM, listening while driving.
It didn't used to be that way until you got out 30 miles or more.
Still can't seem to figure out why it's better to have the "more noise" during moments of multipath flutter, instead of
the old fashioned "soft hissing" we used to enjoy.
Of course on AM the old fashioned soft hissing was dreamy, compared to the hiss-blasts of today.
I guess hissing is just the order of the day.
Anything that hisses continuously is sure to run out of breath eventually.