KB1OKL said:
Ask just about anyone what a shortwave radio is and they will at least have some idea, ask them what an HD radio is and you'll usually get a blank stare or a completely wrong answer. Yep, HD is right on the cusp of success :

. I still don't know anyone personally besides myself who owns one. I have the vaunted Sony and yes it's analog FM reception is great but it's HD reception is a waste of time. I bought it solely to experiment with IBOC and as far as I'm concerned it is a bomb so the tuner has not even been turned on for months besides the fact the I'm afraid I'll forget to shut it off and might start my apartment on fire.
Likewise, I have yet to meet someone else (in the flesh) who owns an HD radio. Almost no one I know even knows what it is. Although a couple admitted to being freaked out by the ads that the HD Alliance were playing around the time of the (TV) analog shutoff. As in "oh no, we're not going to have to buy new radios too!?!" That's about it for the interest in HD radio.
And, Mr. Savage is absolutely right about these endless, monotonic comparisons of HD radio to the adoption of FM. There is actually very little similarity as far as the circumstances are concerned. FM was considered to be very highbrow and expensive back then; the perception was that it was full of classical music for rich people. And that was a time when consumer technology moved at a snail's pace when compared with today. FM was high-tech stuff when compared with phonographs, but also very expensive.
HD radio, on the other hand, isn't all that expensive. The problem is that we now live in a time when consumer technology is progressing at the speed of light. Yeah, HD radio would have seemed really cool and might even have caught on......in 1992. Now, it's long since been eclipsed by iPods and other personal MP3 players, smart phones, satellite radio (yes, it still has far more penetration than HDR will ever have) and now internet-based streaming.
It simply doesn't offer any real value to the masses. Only to a few geeks, a decent percentage of whom would be just as happy to trade the automated HD-2 format of the week for that formerly solid adjacent frequency signal that we lost when the exciter was turned on.
You proponents need to accept something: HD radio is not catching on. If it were to catch on, it would have already done so. But in a world where consumers are more spoiled for choices/options than ever before, HD radio's paltry formatting options are simply not compelling enough reasons to spend a buck.
One last thing:
This business of people not running out to buy shiny new radios, allegedly because they don't spend money on things like that is 100% pure-bred Kentucky horse manure. Here we have a marketplace where middle-class 16 year olds are replacing $300 cellphone handsets on an annual basis so as to get the latest cool apps/functions. We have people running out to buy the newest iPods, iPads, iPhones, etc., even when the old one works just fine. Simply to avail themselves of the latest and greatest new features. IF HD radio offered that kind of value and piqued that sort of interest, the stores would be selling out. But it doesn't and they aren't. The people have spoken with a collective yawn.
Someone needs to clue in Bob Strubel though. I hope he reads this, honestly. Because he needs a reality check.