Savage said:
It's called "the internet."
Infrastructure already exists. Everyone owns a "receiver" or multiple "receivers." It's robust, requires little capital for broadcasters, no new hardware for the consumer, is infinitely expandable for multiple programming needs. It works, and it's expanding at an explosive rate, as opposed to HD which is flatlined - except on AM, where it's down the drain. If you're away from your computer and talking on your cellphone instead of listening to it, there are a billion existing AM & FM receivers out there to listen to your favorite programming - the old-fashioned equally-reliable and proven analog way.
I said it in my last post but I'll say it again. Bandwidth caps are a way of life now for mobile operators and they are only going to get tighter as time goes on. Streaming your favorite content in the car or on the bus is not going to be a practical solution for a lot of people.
Yes there are already a ton of choices on AM/FM with regular analog radios. And most of those are available online, making the transition to mobile listening seamless from the office or home computer. But there are seemingly tens of thousands of
other feeds that people are latching on to that are NOT currently available via terrestrial broadcasts, but they can be shoehorned in on HD subchannels.
Not everyone can afford the exorbitant costs needed to realize the benefit of "internet anywhere".
Going by what's available to me, let's do the numbers:
Broadband internet access at home: $30/month
Broadband wireless internet access by cellphone: $90/month* plus phone costs, plus 2 year commitment.
-or-
Broadband internet access by USB stick: $60/month* plus USB modem costs, plus 2 year commitment, plus laptop in the car.
That's $90-120 per month just for the privilege of being able to listen to streaming radio anywhere, which is a lot more than a one time purchase of an HD radio, and more or less the expenditure for a basic satellite radio setup plus a home dock. And you wouldn't be able to listen to very much streaming audio if you're a typical smartphone user.**
Alternately, we can figure in satellite radio, with a more basic cell phone plan:
Satellite radio: $10-20/month
Wireless internet access, without a smartphone needed for many streaming apps: $30/month*** with no commitment
Factoring in home broadband again, which everyone needs, that's $70-90/month. Cheaper than internet and no bandwidth caps.
If you're lucky to have a favorite format that's streamed online and over the air via HD radio, then you shave off the cost of satellite radio and come in even cheaper, while still maintaining the necessary home broadband and wireless internet on a standard feature phone.
And unlike cell 3G phone coverage, which may be unreliable even in dense urban areas, the HD signal is generally pretty decent in most urban markets, from most decent powered stations.
Do you see now where HD CAN fit, even thought it does not do this now? It has its potential place, if only radio corporations would wake up and smell the synergy.
* - cost for Verizon Wireless' least expensive Individual Plan, plus minimum data plan for smartphones. Includes 450 minutes, unlimited text and 5 GB EV-DO data. Phone costs are around $200.
** - I plugged in the data useage
I have now with a standard old feature phone, then added 10 minutes a day of streaming VIDEO and 15 minutes a day of streaming AUDIO. It surpasses the Verizon data cap by .09 GB. So you can listen to a ton of streaming audio for $90/month, but only if you forgo videos, games and the mobile internet experience.
*** - cost for Page Plus prepaid cellular's 1200 plan, which includes 1200 minutes, 1200 texts and 50 MB of EV-DO data for basic feature phones. (They run on the Verizon network.) Phone costs are around $50.