R.F. Burns said:radiopilot said:Philip J. Smith said:But, everyone has their preferences. Lots of people listen to satellite radio and think I'm nuts when I say I can't stand the poor audio quality. I'll take analog and/or HD Radio over XM or Sirius any day.
Unfortunately millions don't share your views, they'd rather listen to satelite and it's programming with no commercials even though the sound quality might not be up to par compared with commercials and diatribes of dj's on terrestrial radio analog or digital, and I'm one that will listen to satelite any chance I get.
Fix the lousy programming on terrestrial radio and maybe more people will tune their radios to it.. so far the corporate broadcasters haven't learned that lesson yet, now it's a 'Less is More' concept and they believe this is the holy grail to geting more listeners but it's too late, HD and 'stations within stations' isn't going to do it.
Radiopilot
If XM & Sirius had enough subscribers interested in what they are selling, they wouldn't be seeking a merger. Broadcasting is a business and as of this time, terrestrial radio is a success and very profitable. So far satellite radio is a failure. Think about it, both XM & Sirius give their product away (Mercury announced free 3 years of satellite service when you buy a car) and they still can't attract enough listeners to make a profit. People will listen to the sats for free, but when it comes to that monthly charge so far, most people aren't interested.
Mergers are sometimes good for companies sometimes bad, we won't ever know that since we don't sit on either board rooms.
You mention the 3 year deal with Sirius and car companies, but remember this: that's 3 years HD radios won't be in those cars, by that time most of these folks are 'hooked' on satelite or they are already Ipod users and are using both satelite and the mp3 players through the cars system.
$13.00 is nothing compared to the $40-80 of Comcast, $10-50 of DSL, or $35-100 or more for cellular phone service, or $10-50 month of online gaming.. so you see these technophobes have no problem spending so little to get alot 150-300 channels of music/sports/talk if you consider the XM/Sirius merge compared to 3-5 HD stations with possibly 1-5 extra HD-2 or HD-3 lousy programs they wouldn't listen to on regular radio.
Radiopilot