R
rbrucecarter5
Guest
I will be on the road tomorrow - it will be interesting to see if they got their huge daytime footprint back! Now if the rest of the ABC stations will just drop this cr@p ---
rbrucecarter5 said:I will be on the road tomorrow - it will be interesting to see if they got their huge daytime footprint back!
NealH said:Just think of how many jobs could have been saved across the country had broadcasters not wasted the millions they've blown on HD? HD was a calculated and foolish gamble. Satellite isn't radio's chief competitor, but don't let the facts stand in the way of the opinions being pushed by the NAB and the idiots in the suits at the top of the food chain. HD currently sits in 2nd place on my list of the dumbest things in broadcasting, right behind the Telecom Act of 1996.
DavidEduardo said:WBAP sells no more by having audience outside the DFW metro than with it, so the coverage outside the metro is irrelvant today. Over the last 4 or 5 years, KTCK with no coverage outside the metro has pretty much tied WBAP in billings.
copydesk2 said:I'll believe in HD radio when Walmart starts carrying receivers.
TheRover said:copydesk2 said:I'll believe in HD radio when Walmart starts carrying receivers.
Start Believing ! ! !
http://www.walmart.com/search/searc...48_0&search_query=hd+radio&Find.x=15&Find.y=6
Can't the same thing be said for television, and what choice do we get in that decision?? It just seems the government has gotten greedy and in the name of an improved signal, they are auctioning off and reducing the size of the public's airwaves!SmokeRing said:The HD people say they want ALL stations to go 100 percent digital one day (meaning analog goes away), but AM analog is the best solution in emergency situations. The smallest and most cheaply made battery powered (or hand cranked) radios can pick up analog AM signals. 20 years from now, you might very well be stranded without access to mass information if you found yourself in a power outage with all radio signals being digital. Good luck pulling in an HD signal with a small emergency radio. And a power outage is a relatively innocent emergency situation. Imagine a terrorist attack?
But, hey, I'm using logic. I learned long ago to abandon that when dealing with the radio industry. Besides, the free market seems to be taking care of HD radio well enough on its own.