cold_coffee said:
Analog broadcasting is doomed in the near future.
The big question I have is "why"? You provide no reasoning to back up your claim nor does there seem to be any external driver for any move towards digital radio. Conversely:
1. There is an enormous number of analog radio's currently in existence which listeners likely would not replace (and certainly not in the current economic situation).
2. There is no compelling reason to go digital. The government is not clamoring for frequencies (as with TV) nor can anything be gained by compressing current frequency allocations except perhaps more crowding on existing bandwidth. But with the exploding LPFM's this does not appear to be a driver either.
3. Lack of new programming means no compelling demand by listeners. We already have plenty of RushBots, sportsBots, infoBots, religiousBots and a plethora of music offerings. What will drive the new digital channels? Answer - nothing. No demand.
4. Technical drawbacks of digital radio will aggravate, rather than please, its users. Lack of range and inability to lock to a digital signal are seemingly unresolvable and will cause huge customer satisfaction issues for any mobile listeners and equipment providers.
Digital radio is a technology which provides very limited benefits under restrictive listening conditions. Like DTV it will cause more problems than it solves. Unlike DTV there is no compelling reason to implement it except perhaps for the investors of iBiquity.
cold_coffee said:
Next, so called enlightened but unwise men were sitting in the bars of the Titanic and World Trade Center
on Doomsday discussing philosophy. Suddenly, on them, the walls caved in. Those of you who fail to see
the coming doom are like those unwise men.
The Titanic and WTC metaphors are inappropriate and have no relationship to the current state of radio and to digital radio specifically except that, perhaps, the owners of White Star Lines, like iBiquity, were guilty of exaggeration in that their ship, like digital radio, provided benefits that were an illusion.