Savage said:I thought we come here to discuss real-world issues, not imaginary scenarios. Rumination about how wonderful HD could be if It Were Only All-Digital seems kind of like a waste of time, since (a) how well HD actually would work in all-digital mode is unknowable in advance and (b) it's not going to happen.
It's fun to daydream about how municipal tap water might be found to be an effective cure for all kinds of cancer. Or about how a biogeneticist might breed a nine-story high German shepherd that eats politicians, poops Kruggerrands and pees hi-test gasoline.
But kind of beside the point, n'est-ce pas? ;D
PS Closed Circuit for gooroo: thanks for the backwards swipe at my radio station. Typical from the HD-booster crowd. If you knew anything about us, you'd know we do all kinds of innovative things every day. But they're programming-oriented: you know, the part of "radio" listeners actually care about.....?![]()
You know, the TV folks probably thought the same thing about scrapping their analog transmitters several years ago, but it happened. You never know what the future holds. There's another thread happening on this board right now where several people are postulating that "the market" will allow the cellular industry to bend the laws of physics and everyone listening to terrestrial radio right now will soon be able to migrate to IP audio. That to me seems about as likely as a transition to all digital FM, and impossible without the Commission granting them a lot more spectrum.
What swipe? Questioning what kind of innovation you're personally engaging in vs. bemoaning how the rest of the industry spends its time and money with HD? Just pointing out the obvious - you can't control the rest of the industry, so I assume you're busy innovating on your own. I was just rhetorically curious as to what that innovation might be. It seems to me that you should be happy the folks over at WHAM are wasting all this time and money on HD that they could be spending out programming and out promoting you.