Jeff Laurence said:
So Bob..whee is the need for a transmitter and towers in a couple years? No need for licenses..not need for all that electricity, and radiation either. Sounds like the new medium is becoming more mainstream faster than anyone ever thought.
Before I started writing what you're reading here, I actually had 3 other versions I wrote and then deleted because this scenario of no more transmitters and towers really does make one think about all the different possibilities offered by the growing availability of wireless internet. I don't know if internet radio will take over in just a
couple years, but I think it has a good shot at happening within the next 5-10 years.
But transmitters, towers, electricity and radiation will still be here... we're just trading in one wireless technology for another. In order for internet-based radio to overtake terrestrial radio, high-speed internet needs to be made more accessible in more places. Sure, there's no problem getting WiFi signals in office buildings or college campuses... and that's great as long as you plan on sitting in one place with a desktop or laptop computer. But if you're going to be driving around (where a sizeable chunk of listening happens) then WiFi, as it exists right now, isn't going to cut it.
WiFi, in the traditional sense, has a range of only a few hundred feet at best, assuming optimal conditions -- such as no major obstacles between your device and the WiFi access point, and your device being able to transmit WiFi signals just as powerfully as the access point does.
When you're talking about driving around town, across the state or across the country, sure, you can access those online radio stations from just about anywhere... but only if you have a smartphone capable of accessing those streams AND the unlimited data plan to go with it. So, in today's technology, you're needing at least $100 to get in, and at least $50-60 (or more) per month for the service. And even then, there is not ONE cell phone company that can guarantee full, high-quality signal coverage everywhere you go. Terrestrial radio, on the other hand, has no monthly access fee, you can get the required device (a radio) for little or no money, and the signals are often pretty reliable, even in areas where cell phone service is non-existent.
Bottom line: yes, internet radio could take over, but first, we need the infrastructure to make it happen. And that'll likely mean the need for towers, licenses, transmitters and radiation. Radio owners could actually make a pretty penny selling their broadcast facilities to cell phone companies, who can then re-use the towers to increase the reach of wireless internet coverage.
We would also need a way to make sure internet-streamed radio is just as easily-accessible and FREE, as terrestrial radio. I can't see the FCC allowing terrestrial radio to vanish, because requiring everyone to buy high-tech devices and data service plans would likely leave many people in the dark... including poorer people who can't afford the technology and old people who either can't afford it or more likely just don't want to deal with learning newer technologies. (Look at how many don't understand DTV, and likely got taken to the cleaners when they walked into places like Best Buy or Radio Shack to seek help.) If there's a tornado warning, flood warning, etc. a lot of people could be left uninformed. It may take another 10-20 years before we're finally at a point where literally "everyone" is tech-savvy enough for the disappearance of terrestrial radio (and TV for that matter) to become a real possibility.
Anyway, it's getting late and I'm barely able to type. So to keep with the thread, anyone else see Rick's new TV commercials? He appears as a spokesman for Zerodraft. Nice to see him back on TV, just for the fact he's back on TV... but odd to see him dressed in the company's standard uniform and appearing just to hawk their product. I'd like to hope and think it's just gravy and the guy doesn't "need" the extra work, but then again, how much can Galaxy
possibly be paying him?