E
EbolaMonkey
Guest
If you want to sample HD AM and check the stereo and so on, buy a radio and listen. Any recording is going to be colored by the codec it is converted to by recording in a portable format. Obviously, if you are so anxious to hear HD, it means you have never heard it and have no idea how nice it sounds, AM or FM.
That's weak. Give us some hard evidence, holmes. As I said, I'm in Dallas and there aren't any IBOC AM stereo signals here. And I've never gotten an IBOC AM mono to come in at a Radio Shack either.
If you want to prove your point, cough up an air check. Surely you've got a portable DAT recorder or a flash recorder available to you. When you're in a market with a stereo AM IBOC, snag us an air check. When you dump it to your computer, save it as a PCM .wav file. Trust me, the journey from DAT or Flash drive to PCM .wav won't mess up the air check. It's the IBOC signal you should worry about.
Not really. You mentioned hiphop, CHR and modern rock first. The fact is, that those genres actually are only about half the listening by 18-34's.
Ahh... I see. Your original reference to "30.9%" wasn't written clearly.
So my suspicion that most of the 18 to 34 demo listens to hip hop, CHR and modern rock should be amended. 50 percent of them, by far the largest percentage, listen to those genres. When the 30 percent of Spanish speakers is factored out, the overwhelming number of English listeners are indeed listening to exactly what I claimed they were. Sorry, I don't factor Spanish radio into my stats.
When you're on a Spanish language board in a Spanish speaking country, maybe you find them to be equally uninterested in English speaking stats.
most receivers sold today are not stereo to begin with.
But to keep that stat relevant to this conversation, do you have a stat on the receivers the 18 to 34 demo purchases? iPods, Walkmans, Jam Boxes. They don't buy kitchen table radios, Dave.
"Control board" ? I guess you do not spend much time in a radio station, if you have ever been in one.
What do you call it? If it's a Spanglish term, please forgive me for not having it available. Seriously, I've always heard the on-air studio's board referred to as a "control board." Or the FM studio board. I guess there are other terms, but I've never run into anyone who was offended by someone calling it a "control board."
There are many freeware audio editors, so your insistence that most teens are criminals is exaggerated. In fact, one of the least likely pirated apps is Audition as it requires a key, and activation, and can deactivate itself via any attempt to update a pirate copy.
It's not that tough to pirate Audition. I'm not a hacker myself, but I've run into plenty of 20 and 30-somethings over the years who know where to go on the Internet to find serial numbers, software keys, codes, etc.