KB1OKL said:I had written "started" in case you missed it, it was all downhill from there.
It couldn't have "started" without people owning the radios in the first place.
KB1OKL said:I had written "started" in case you missed it, it was all downhill from there.
TheBigA said:KB1OKL said:I had written "started" in case you missed it, it was all downhill from there.
It couldn't have "started" without people owning the radios in the first place.
KB1OKL said:Availability of FM radios grew with consumer demand which is not happening at all with HD
local oscillator said:One thing is for sure -- back then, there were no equivalents to iBiquity and the HD Radio Alliance frantically trying to foist a flawed technology onto an unsuspecting public.
TheBigA said:KB1OKL said:Availability of FM radios grew with consumer demand which is not happening at all with HD
This ignores the fact that the majority of FM radios at the time were manufactured in Japan. Not the US. So it wasn't "consumer demand," and certainly not motivated by low-audience progressive rock stations. US manufacturers were slow to catch on to FM.
TheBigA said:local oscillator said:One thing is for sure -- back then, there were no equivalents to iBiquity and the HD Radio Alliance frantically trying to foist a flawed technology onto an unsuspecting public.
You underestimate the power of RCA that did everything it could to frustrate and intimidate the growth and development of FM as long as it could. Once people were able to sample FM, they liked it. They aren't getting that chance with HD. The general public has not been able to make a judgement about HD. And you can blame iBiquity for that.
KB1OKL said:People had a reason to buy FM back then, it had great new programming besides the fact that FM has "no static at all".
KB1OKL said:The public has made a judgment on HD: a big collective yawn.
Savage said:I have no idea what you're trying to say about "the public hasn't been able to make a judgement about HD," BigA. The product has been relentlessly hyped for four years now.
I currently own several pre-1970 RCA radios that included FM. For RCA, FM was a reasonably popular offering by the early 1960's. When I worked at a TV & Radio Shop in 1963, we certainly were selling them in reasonable numbers.TheBigA said:I read somewhere that RCA continued to refuse to add FM to its radios until after Sarnoff retired in 1970.
Their lawyer says the lawsuits [over Armstrong’s FM patents] continued until 1967.
I asked whether you could cite any cases. If you can’t cite cases that we can check out on the web, or at least in the law books, you’re not answering me. In effect, you’re just saying, “Because I said so!”
You are not quite correct on that. For years, FM was an extra cost option. Usually, it nearly doubled the price of many stand alone table radios. In the automotive market it sometimes came at an even bigger premium than that. Even so, back in the 1960’s and 70’s, people were willing to pay a lot more just to get FM.TheBigA said:They got FM for free. When they bought a new radio, it usually contained FM.
radioskeptic said:This is a little embarassing. I accidently posted the first of the following three Replies on a thread on "The business of Radio" message board. Th BigA didn't notice that mistake, probably because he, too, has the same two threads on different tabs at the same time.
KB1OKL said:BTW Big A, you ought to buy an IBOC radio to see just how lousy and cumbersome they really are.
Chuck said:You are not quite correct on that. For years, FM was an extra cost option. Usually, it nearly doubled the price of many stand alone table radios.
Apparently it was, because few major manufacturers, especially American owned companies, included it. What changed everything was when Japanese companies began including FM in their portables. That happened in the mid 60s. I imagine part of that was because of the international market.
I read somewhere that RCA continued to refuse to add FM to its radios until after Sarnoff retired in 1970.
TheBigA said:I said "EDUCATED judgement." I don't even own one, and I'm a huge fan of radio. That's why you don't see me talking about HD. Then again, I haven't bought a radio in 15 years. You give me one for free, make it standard in my car, and I'll listen. Then I can make a judgement. Until then, I'm just making my decision based on hearsay.