local oscillator said:Would I still hate it? Yes!!! Eliminating one of its many negatives while it continues on without any positives isn't a game-changer. HD Radio has been incredibly detrimental to our industry. It has diverted attention and resources away from issues that should be of far greater concern. The radio industry has some serious problems -- most self-inflicted -- that are more deserving of attention and resources than trying to band-aid some unnecessary digital junk-science project. The NAB and the big groups are fiddling while Rome burns.
Nick said:Lets say that HD radio finds a way to not buzz on the adjacents, but all other benefits and drawbacks remain. The HD coverage would also remain the same. Would you still hate HD radio?
Nick said:If they gave up everything on FM above 15 kHz (that includes stereo), would HD not buzz on the adjacents?
CTListener said:I don't hate it now. WDRC-FM HD2 the only thing keeping the music of the '50s and '60s on the air in Connecticut, and 102.9 doesn't have any adjacents I ever listened to anyway.
The Dude said:CTListener said:I don't hate it now. WDRC-FM HD2 the only thing keeping the music of the '50s and '60s on the air in Connecticut, and 102.9 doesn't have any adjacents I ever listened to anyway.
It would be nice IF THEY STREAMED THAT ONLINE!!!!!!! (Some of us are out of the area and WOULD LOVE LISTENING!!)
The Dude said:Yea I know.....
There are several FREE streaming providers out there,they should put it up with them!!
Savage said:HD Radio was an anachronism almost from its launch date. It was rushed to market to give terrestrial radio a platform to compete with satellite, which was much-feared 10 to 12 years ago. The threat of commercial-free sat radio to commercial terrestrial radio has failed to materialize. There is no need for HD and no demand, except for a few narrow carve-outs like alternate audio streams for NPR stations who wanted to preserve jazz and classical to superserve their base.
Even if the technical problems weren't so egregious HD would still be a non-starter. Given the interference, the lousy coverage, the artifacts, the staggering operating costs, and the lack of receivers, it's deader than disco. With the AM flavor, the foregoing is true x20.