M
Mike Walker
Guest
I don't mean to confuse you with facts, Roscoe, but a)-QVC sold all the radios they had planned (it was only a half-hour, and nobody expected any one event on a cable network with viewers measured in tens of thousands to be a "turning point" for anything. If so, they were obviously dropped on their head as a child!)
Here in my small, small community a local 3kw FM just asked MY OPINION about whether it's time to go HD. This is a single small station, owned by one man...not a part of a group, and not in a metro area. It's the kind of thing that's not suppsed to be happending "It's just those awful corporated-owned "Alliance" members!"
There are many times the number of HD products available now as six months ago, from most of the major manufacturers. The radios are now in cars, with more big announcements on that front to come. The radios are now in affordable devices...like 150 dollar shelf systems, complete with mp3 and dvd playback, so in effect HD Radio is a "gimme" for free. It's VALUE ADDED! It's in the home-theater receivers that are selling like crazy, as well as the popular high-quality table radios. It's in Ipod-docking units, probably the most popular category in the entire marketplace. And in a few months, it'll be in pocket portables.
WFDD Winston Salem, NC is expanding their HD offerings from two, to three streams in January, making available classical music on their HD2 (available nowhere else in the "Triad" market), and an eclectic mix (blues, folk, bluegrass, etc) on the HD3. That in addition to the mainstream NPR programming on their main channel/HD1. Why does this matter? NPR ALONE HAS MORE LISTENERS THAN BOTH SATELLITE RADIO SERVICES COMBINED! NPR's listeners are willing and MOTIVATED to pay for radio, even when they don't have to. So of course they're buying (from the NPR store) HD RADIOS!
And have you been following that station count in Radio World? It doesn't seem to be sinking, Roscoe. But hey, other than the extraordinary growth, and LIFE in all sectors of the market, on the "supply" (broadcast) and "consumer" (listener) sides of the equation, then yeah...HD Radio is "deader''n Elvis!"
Here in my small, small community a local 3kw FM just asked MY OPINION about whether it's time to go HD. This is a single small station, owned by one man...not a part of a group, and not in a metro area. It's the kind of thing that's not suppsed to be happending "It's just those awful corporated-owned "Alliance" members!"
There are many times the number of HD products available now as six months ago, from most of the major manufacturers. The radios are now in cars, with more big announcements on that front to come. The radios are now in affordable devices...like 150 dollar shelf systems, complete with mp3 and dvd playback, so in effect HD Radio is a "gimme" for free. It's VALUE ADDED! It's in the home-theater receivers that are selling like crazy, as well as the popular high-quality table radios. It's in Ipod-docking units, probably the most popular category in the entire marketplace. And in a few months, it'll be in pocket portables.
WFDD Winston Salem, NC is expanding their HD offerings from two, to three streams in January, making available classical music on their HD2 (available nowhere else in the "Triad" market), and an eclectic mix (blues, folk, bluegrass, etc) on the HD3. That in addition to the mainstream NPR programming on their main channel/HD1. Why does this matter? NPR ALONE HAS MORE LISTENERS THAN BOTH SATELLITE RADIO SERVICES COMBINED! NPR's listeners are willing and MOTIVATED to pay for radio, even when they don't have to. So of course they're buying (from the NPR store) HD RADIOS!
And have you been following that station count in Radio World? It doesn't seem to be sinking, Roscoe. But hey, other than the extraordinary growth, and LIFE in all sectors of the market, on the "supply" (broadcast) and "consumer" (listener) sides of the equation, then yeah...HD Radio is "deader''n Elvis!"