Here we go again. Somebody points out how HD Radio, save for a few sharply-defined apps like public broadcasting, is slowly attaining room temperature (the AM flavor has been dead for two years but iBiquity and its developer-group operators just refuse to read the memo.) And the retort comes: "radio" is dead, not just HD. I don't buy it. (I will add that this comment comes from the same posters who strenously assert "I really don't care one way one way or the other about HD Radio" yet somehow invariably assail HD critics.)
FWIW, our local market of Rochester, NY is up this year after several consecutive years of declining radio revenues. We're finishing up another record year, best in our history. And this performance is in an Upstate NY economy which is moribund at best.
Sure, radio has challenges. But I heartily agree with gooroo that any problems radio has are due to lack of content and a dearth of interesting, engaging programming, and not with technical limitations. Actually HD is contributing to technical problems found objectionable by typical listeners, by increasing interference and noise and limiting effective coverage. It is achieving precisely the opposite of its declared purposes. HD is claimed to provide a quieter, more high-fidelity end product, but in the end it delivers an artifact-laden, noisy, mode-hopping, limited coverage facsimile of the analog product found perfectly acceptable by the existing audience.
But the worst thing about HD is that it divides radio broadcasters and pits them against one another, as this board bears eloquent witness. If you are a believer in "radio" and think it has potentially life-threatening problems, you should also believe that HD needs to be spiked ASAP, so we can work productively together to address the future with a unified and confident voice instead of quarreling about something almost nobody in the real world cares about.
As a footnote I will observe that continuing to flog a dead issue like HD Radio makes the whole industry look clueless to those outside the industry. Just imagine the spectacle of Ford Motor Company continuing to hype the Edsel seven years after its disastrous debut instead of introducing the game-changing Mustang in 1964.
FWIW, our local market of Rochester, NY is up this year after several consecutive years of declining radio revenues. We're finishing up another record year, best in our history. And this performance is in an Upstate NY economy which is moribund at best.
Sure, radio has challenges. But I heartily agree with gooroo that any problems radio has are due to lack of content and a dearth of interesting, engaging programming, and not with technical limitations. Actually HD is contributing to technical problems found objectionable by typical listeners, by increasing interference and noise and limiting effective coverage. It is achieving precisely the opposite of its declared purposes. HD is claimed to provide a quieter, more high-fidelity end product, but in the end it delivers an artifact-laden, noisy, mode-hopping, limited coverage facsimile of the analog product found perfectly acceptable by the existing audience.
But the worst thing about HD is that it divides radio broadcasters and pits them against one another, as this board bears eloquent witness. If you are a believer in "radio" and think it has potentially life-threatening problems, you should also believe that HD needs to be spiked ASAP, so we can work productively together to address the future with a unified and confident voice instead of quarreling about something almost nobody in the real world cares about.
As a footnote I will observe that continuing to flog a dead issue like HD Radio makes the whole industry look clueless to those outside the industry. Just imagine the spectacle of Ford Motor Company continuing to hype the Edsel seven years after its disastrous debut instead of introducing the game-changing Mustang in 1964.