You keep totally keeping my point. Your perspective is coming from the broadcaster's perspective. In the consumer's eyes - the ONLY - as in ONLY reason to even consider upgrading to an HD radio is the promised "stations between the stations". You are absolutely right in that for most people, analog - and therefore the HD-1 - is the only reason to listen to radio. But the commercials promised more stations. If they aren't there, if HD only copies the format already on analog, the consumer has absolutely no reason to upgrade to HD radio. None. The audio improvements are miniscule for the MP3 / earbud crowd. The comparisons to FM, and FM stereo are VALUELESS, because there was a dramatic increase in quality in the move from AM to FM, and then there was the advantage of stereo music. Digital instead of analog - this isn't another TV upgrade where HD TV really was a big leap in quality from NTSC. HD cannot stand on audio improvement because only a few of us can tell the difference. It takes hundreds or thousands of dollars to have an audio system where HD radio really shines. I have such a system. But the improvement in audio quality goes away if the station has an HD-2. By the time the count is to HD-3, all three sound worse than analog FM. But average consumers won't know that. So - for consumers - the killer app is more stations. If those stations are unreliable, the average consumer gives up. No excuses. Either these are bonafide broadcast stations, taken seriously, or you are right, they might as well be web sites. HD FM will fail in the marketplace, and the only application will be feeding translators. Automakers will start removing it in an economy measure, because there are no stations between the stations - at least not reliable ones. And as much as I hate to admit it - the format choices I enjoy on HD-2 are simply not viable commercially. If HD radio ever becomes a hit, those HD-2 channels will have to be monetized with formats that will make money. The very fact that niche formats exist on HD-2 is the clearest possible proof that nobody is listening to HD except enthusiasts for those formats, and there aren't very many of them. They get thrown a bone to shut them up, nobody has to care if HD-2 is reliable or not, because stations KNOW that nobody is listening to HD radio. So - why even pretend that it is here to stay, or that it is somehow a success, or that people will flock to it the way they did to FM stereo? It just isn't happening, it won't happen, because HD-2 is not a priority, and it was the one and only "killer app"" that was promised. Remember the promised surround sound on HD radio? Never happened. Now HD-2's are unreliable and even folding. In 20 years, the only HD radios will be those required to feed translators, because consumers moved on to something else that WAS reliable.