SUPERCASTER said:
The ineptitude of this business as a whole is why HD will never catch on and more than likely go the way of AM stereo within a few years. The entire idea was botched from the start, from the technology itself, to calling it "HD Radio", to the marketing of the radios. Every square inch of the plan has failed miserably. If the industry could have settled on the technology sooner and launched it before satellite and internet became options, it may have had a chance to survive. They didn't, and it won't.
Another meandering thought...most of what's programmed on "regular" terrestrial stations isn't any good, so why would you expect something on a secondary programming outlet, run by the same people, to be any better?
http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,78242.msg574310.html#msg574310
The poster's complaint about the ineptitude of those involved in the HD Radio rollout is right on the money. Even if HD Radio was the best broadcasting technology ever invented, the marketing of it has been a disaster.
Having listened to the radio PSAs for HD-R, I notice that while they dutifully list the bullet points for it (stations between stations, crystal-clear digital sound, song/artist display, etc.) it is never clearly indicated that to enjoy HD Radio you have to replace your existing radio with an HD Radio. Consumer confusion is inevitable.
A person owning, say, a new Lincoln Town Car could look at his in-dash radio and say, "Well, my radio has a digital tuner, the tuner says FM 1 or FM 2, it has RDS so I'm seeing the song title and artist's name, the sound is good and my car is new so I must have HD Radio." That's assuming, of course, that the person is even listening to the ads or gets the concept in the first place.
The other problem is that, even if a person gets the concept, what programming on the other 'stations between stations' is there that would compel him/her to rush out and buy and HD Radio? Do they even know what is available on these secondary channels in their area?
To sell HD Radio, the industry is going to have to spend, spend, spend on billboards, TV spots and print ads. In fact, I'm surprised Clear Channel isn't exploiting their Outdoor Division more by putting up billboard ads for HD Radio. The radio ad campaign has been woefully inadequate.
In short, the radio industry has done a
terrible job educating the consumer about HD Radio and they will only have themselves to blame for its failure (not that I care, mind you).
db