"HD reminds me of DCC (Digital Compact Cassette)," notes Hill, "another attempt by a mature industry to administer life support to a sunset format. That didn't work either, and today almost no one even remembers it."
http://www.synthtopia.com/news/06_08/Stephen_Hill_Digital_Radi.html
http://www.podcastingnews.com/archives/2006/07/public_radio_gu_1.html
Since FMeXtra www,dreinc.com, AOL/Winamp/streamcast all use the same AAC Plus codec from Coding Technologies that HD Radio uses, they all have the same quality at the same bitrate! Some streaming stations use a much higher AAC Plus bitrate then HD Radio, and therefore have much higher quality then HD Radio.
Check out the list of AAC plus licensees:
http://www.codingtechnologies.com/partners/index.htm
You can listen to these better then HD quality streaming stations by using the latest version of the free Winamp player http://www.winamp.com/, or by the new Windows Media plug in (scroll down for AAC Plus stations links) http://www.tuner2.com/
iPods and many other similar players also use AAC encoding.
HD Radio is a system that is expensive, defective and already obsolete.
http://www.synthtopia.com/news/06_08/Stephen_Hill_Digital_Radi.html
Face it, folks...when you add it up, HD Radio as a platform will never be competitive with satellite or Internet radio on a value for value basis for the end user.
http://heartsofspace.typepad.com/spatialrelations/What about online radio? Now you have tens of thousands of channels: a mind-boggling array of niche and specialty content in addition to deep choice of mainstream formats. In many cases, you have fewer or zero commercials. You have on-demand access and deep archives. You have asynchronous subscription delivery, aka podcasting. And you have ubiquitous wired access, with wide-area wireless Internet rolling out starting last year on the 3G cellular nets. And now the hardware cost is rolled into your smart cell phone, which is being upgraded every 2-3 years on average anyway.
http://www.synthtopia.com/news/06_08/Stephen_Hill_Digital_Radi.htmlAt his blog, Hill makes a persuasive case for the advantages of podcasting and on-demand Internet audio over digital radio. He notes that typical Internet audio is already higher quality than HD, there are more options on the Internet and people don't need to purchase a special $500 HD radio.
http://www.podcastingnews.com/archives/2006/07/public_radio_gu_1.html
Since FMeXtra www,dreinc.com, AOL/Winamp/streamcast all use the same AAC Plus codec from Coding Technologies that HD Radio uses, they all have the same quality at the same bitrate! Some streaming stations use a much higher AAC Plus bitrate then HD Radio, and therefore have much higher quality then HD Radio.
Check out the list of AAC plus licensees:
http://www.codingtechnologies.com/partners/index.htm
You can listen to these better then HD quality streaming stations by using the latest version of the free Winamp player http://www.winamp.com/, or by the new Windows Media plug in (scroll down for AAC Plus stations links) http://www.tuner2.com/
iPods and many other similar players also use AAC encoding.
HD Radio is a system that is expensive, defective and already obsolete.