mmnassour said:But....is it really unexpected?
Well, price can't be the issue..
mmnassour said:But....is it really unexpected?
Nick said:If HD radios are so cheap now, a station should just buy a lot of them and give them away at events to promote their HD2s.
I was under the impression iBiquity had at least reduced the fee for the receivers as low as they are. Maybe sellers are taking a bath on them.Nick said:Maybe iBiquity could get rid of its licensing fee for a year to drive the price of HD radios down so that more people have them. But seeing that even $10 HD radios aren't selling, that might not happen.
Thank you for that clarification, the visual I was getting wouldn’t go away...Savage said:From personal experience this is why I would never install any aftermarket electronics in
my car. They're an open invitation to break-ins. Nav units are a favorite for loser-types
to steal so they can scrape up another ten bucks for crack. Long ago I tossed the
Magellan into the old-stuff box and started using the voice-activated Google Nav function
on my Droid, which works much better anyway.
About a year ago I had the passenger-side window smashed out of my Jeep while it was
parked at Macaroni Grill, on a late sunny weekday afternoon and right under a
surveillance camera, because there were a UPS and a FedEx package visible on the front
seat.
Hope the perps enjoyed the size-ZERO dress my girlfriend had ordered and the nose-hair
trimmer too (no, the shaver wasn't for her.)![]()
That is something that was a very long time in coming.Savage said:Ahh, all so true. And now, "the good news".....most factory audio systems now incorporate an 1/8" TRS Aux jack. Now, with the appropriate patch cable, you can just plug in anything from an HD tuner to your Nano to your 1949 Pilotuner (don't forget the 200-watt AC inverter!)
Before you park, you can stash it all away out of sight where it won't represent a temptation to unemployed and hungry former iBiquity employees. Or Guy Wire.