Since we're talking about hardware....
Yesterday, Mrs. BRNout went shopping and purchased a typical bookshelf system for the bedroom. She wanted to be able to play music from CDs, her iPod and the radio. And, she opted for a Sony CMT-LX20i bookshelf system - then asked me to take a look and "approve" it when I got home.
As these sorts of systems go, I guess it's okay - which is to say that it does many things and that the radio portion of it almost seems an afterthought. It came with this flimsy little POS AM/FM antenna that features thin-gauge wire connected to a plastic square (which, I assume is filled with the aforementioned thin wire). It then plugs in to a receptacle that is located in the back of the stereo. From my experience, it seems that the majority of the cheaper systems come with these antennas now. And they're AWFUL. My reception of AM and FM with a Walkman is far better than what this unit delivers. And, it's not like you can buy a different type of antenna as there's nowhere to connect it. Only that plug-in.
But, the thing is, it does what she wants it to do and it can pull in most Chicago signals well. The fact that a dozen other semi-locals from Milwaukee cannot be received on this thing is of little concern to her, nor that my clock radio on the nightstand blows it's doors off as far as reception is concerned. That's because, once up and running, she plugged in her iPod and used it that way.
I bring all this up because it demonstrates what an afterthought radio has become in the overall marketplace. Yes, there are radio geeks (such as your's truly) who buy the latest hot multi-band portable from China and who can pull in FMs from 130 miles away with it. But we're insignificant in the marketplace. The above-described, low quality radio which Sony put in as an afterthought in their music system is more typical of what's out there. Crappy, crappy radios that sell because few even use them as radios. They're more interested in the MP3/iPod function and that it has a CD player so that it can play a few of those old CDs that they may have lying around. That it has a radio is merely a pleasant extra. That the radio is functions poorly and only pulls in stations from within the 60 dBu contour is not noticed by anyone.
Remembering my college days in the 80s when every guy worth his salt in the dorm had a high-powered receiver mated to awesome speakers, a dual cassette player, a turntable, perhaps one of those brand-new (and expensive) CD players and a killer antenna with which he could pull in every AOR station within 120 miles makes me feel like a geezer! Clearly, those days are over.
Hate to be a downer on this fine Friday morning, but the prospects for radio as we know it over the next 20 years are not great.