mmnassour said:Of course, that assumes any HD radio in Austin has been turned on.
willdav713 said:But you got to remember UT students stream off their smart phones a majority of them do not all of them.
They made a logical question to what radio will be at in 20 years. I would say Digital Satellite Radio and the XM would be on the premium tier. Kind of like the DTV transition. It will happen. AM/FM analog transmission will be gone, gone like those Comcast Cable from the Wall reception. In less than 10 years. 2017, or 2019. If this site is still up in 2019 and my wager is right, I will keep my rare Maxell UR-F tape, if not I will sell it.
willdav713 said:They can go unlimited, they are just doing it to make more money for themselves.
But if you would add all of the AM and FM band, I am sure there is some way to free up a whole lot of spectrum.
But analog FM will die, it is just a matter of time. Radio will be always around, just not on the medium we currently have.
For TV everything will be net based.
Does DSL operate on Radio Frequency of some sort? Because those same towers that now broadcast radio will have a new life of bringing internet access to all, and it will replace Wi-Fi.
Kent said:willdav713 said:For TV everything will be net based.
Agreed, and it will happen before FM radio goes that way!
Does DSL operate on Radio Frequency of some sort? Because those same towers that now broadcast radio will have a new life of bringing internet access to all, and it will replace Wi-Fi.
While there are some wireless broadband providers that use radio signals to go to a central station, those are fairly uncommon right now. Traditional DSL travels through the data part of your phone line. Your traditional phone line is actually two lines, voice and data. Burglar alarms used to take advantage of the data side, and that was why, even a few years ago, you still had to have a landline phone if you had a burglar alarm. I believe you also had to have two phone lines if you had both a burglar alarm and DSL, but don't hold me to that. The telephone companies also figured out they could use the data side of the phone line to transmit internet, and it travels to the switching stations and the servers much the same way your voice does on a traditional landline phone.
I can see it offering high speed in rural America, and the FCC wants all persons to be able to connect to broadband. The broadband initiative is big talk of the FCC these days. They want people in Columbus, Texas and even Marfa to connect at broadband speeds without the sluggish Direct Way dish.
willdav713 said:I can see it offering high speed in rural America, and the FCC wants all persons to be able to connect to broadband. The broadband initiative is big talk of the FCC these days. They want people in Columbus, Texas and even Marfa to connect at broadband speeds without the sluggish Direct Way dish.