FM is not going away.
What we're talking about is a replacement for 880 AM. That replacement is the 880App.
FM is not going away.
And for the time being, radio waves will also be broadcast via FM. Until every car, even cheap ones, can stream audio from your phone over the car's speakers,
Their only source of income are station licenses and royalties on chips that use their technology. How else would they make money?Never because the company that created HD radio wants all the money.
And for which you will spend money.As cellular broadband becomes increasingly ubiquitous and reliable, I would expect to see cars offering built-in internet tuners. So your presets might be a mix of terrestrial radio and streaming sources. This would be accomplished with a data plan for your car, similar to a data plan you might get for your iPad.
The fight includes reinventing the station with exclusive content, which is Mets baseball.
Putting it on FM just kicks the can down the road to when FM goes away. Which is quicker than we think. FM is not the solution boomers think it is. Ask the folks at Good Karma. You need to look at FM usage rates. FM is not the future.
What we're talking about is a replacement for 880 AM. That replacement is the 880App.
Their only source of income are station licenses and royalties on chips that use their technology. How else would they make money?
So why not turn off all the FM transmitters then?
That app now competes with everything else streaming on your phone. Instead of 20 FCC FM radio licenses there are a thousand... tens of thousands... maybe hundreds of thousands of streaming radio stations from around the world to choose from.
No one has thousands of apps on their phone. I have four.
All WCBS needs to do is be one of the apps that people regularly check on their phone. They do it with compelling content, just like they do it on the radio.
Show me a station with meaningful streaming numbers in New York.
They've already invested in the future. This is what it looks like:
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Download it to your phone, and it's always there. Crystal clear sound, not AM radio.
You need to listen more closely, it's the Audacity app. I haven't had the audacy to try it yet but I have a clown one from this blogging company. Apparently they also have some radio stations too.I'll bet the Mets are not that many years away from demanding their games get aired on an FM signal like so many other major league teams have already done.
So why not turn off all the FM transmitters then? The reason is radio broadcasters are in the business of running FM radio stations and in New York they still make tens of millions of dollars from each signal every year.
That app now competes with everything else streaming on your phone. Instead of 20 FCC FM radio licenses there are a thousand... tens of thousands... maybe hundreds of thousands of streaming radio stations from around the world to choose from. Not to mention a Hey Siri / Hey Google command to give you the local headlines along with countless news apps and websites a tap away, all on the same device where the 880 app resides.
Besides, is there even an 880 app? Or is is just on the Odyssey app? Whoops, can't find that one.
It's about time!Regarding the discussion earlier in this thread concerning 94.7 The Block- Audacy shifted WPOW in Miami yesterday to a throwback format that appears to be similar. That could possibly be an indication the format is meeting their expectations in New York.
Throwbacks on WPOW in Miami
Also, the apps are great if you have solid coverage. But what happens when the disasters hit and the cellular network fails or is overloaded? We had a power outage recently where I live. Got me thinking...once your phone battery dies, where do you turn for information when something more severe happens? Radio, is my obvious answer.
Not really ??The average car is over 11 years old now, and that means that half of them are over that age.
The average car is over 11 years old now, and that means that half of them are over that age.
What David should have written was median age, where half the cars on the road are younger than 11 years, and half are older than 11 years. That takes into account that there are more vehicles on the road from recent model years, but the universe of vehicles from older model years spans a longer period of time. (Example: I happened to be parked next to an early 1950's-era van yesterday. That's a ~70 y/o vehicle.) But as you point out, averages are more subject to the vagaries of the particular samples being averaged.Not really ??
What if there were 3 cars
They could be 16 & 9 & 9 = 11+avg.
I think FM is the continuing future for broadcast radio. Apps and the internet are important, but likely won't be the driving factor for a long time to come. GKB has 1050 to keep the program on the radio dial for casual listeners. That sports station in Indianapolis has FM translators to keep them on the dial. Advertisers will want to be on something that has broadcasting capability. HD, Apps and web only 'stations' have to be sought out. Particularly with HD radio, I think there is generally a paucity of actual advertising.That's not what I'm saying. Craig Karmazin turned down a chance to buy 98.7 and is just going to run WEPN on AM and online. Just like WCBS. If it works for Craig, and he has deals with two major sports teams, than it should work just fine for WCBS and the Mets. What I'm saying is that just putting WCBS on 94.7 isn't the end game.
A dedicated app downloaded on your phone is as selective as a transistor radio. Once you download the app, it's no longer a needle in a haystack. No one has thousands of apps on their phone. I have four. All WCBS needs to do is be one of the apps that people regularly check on their phone. They do it with compelling content, just like they do it on the radio. The future is not FM. My house doesn't have a radio. Everything runs off my ISP, including TV and phone.
The average car is over 11 years old now, and that means that half of them are over that age. And the average consumer can not afford a wide variety of streaming and entertainment fees in their monthly budget.