Carmine5 said:There is an interesting entry in the DIYMedia blog decrying the secrecy surrounding the scheduled test of all digital HD-AM (actually its a series of three or four tests involving several AM stations).
As the author points out there has been a consistent lack of transparency in the testing of new technology for the radio industry. For HD Radio, as an example, a small but powerful cabal of radio companies tested the system, presented their findings before the FCC and the Commission adopted it without, apparently, any thought as to how this would affect smaller independent stations or the industry as a whole.
To quote:
"As the record shows, this lack of transparency during HD's development poisoned the policymaking environment and trade press. There was massive consternation among independent (i.e., non-iBiquity investor) broadcasters and the public about HD's fundamental viability, not to mention its profound effects on the future potentiality of digital radio broadcasting itself. However, by that point the FCC had already effectively made up its mind on HD by opting out of any active role in the technology's development and plans for rollout."
So the secrecy surrounding the AM station lucky enough to get this all-digital test is just part of a larger, long-standing pattern.
http://www.diymedia.net/
Of course, you don't think the HD monopoly would want opposing opinions about their junk technology getting to the clueless FCC do you?