It makes me so angry sometimes, the stupid things that radio industry spokespeople say.
Satellite radio, especially after a (theoretical) merger, is this BIIIIIG threat to terrestrial radio and their fledgling Hybrid-Digital system. But wait! A (theoretically) merged company only has a tiny tiny percentage of total listeners... Do huh now? How can they be a threat if only a few people tune in? ???
I said in another post a few minutes earlier that one thing that will really help HD radio is programming. Well, programming is what drove me to satellite radio. Like Mike, I'm also a longtime XM subscriber. They offered formats and programs that I wanted which local terrestrial radio in Birmingham (AL) just didn't offer. The shows I enjoy that aren't on XM? On my local stations. I still tuned in local talk stations and a distant public radio station for programming I couldn't get elsewhere. Combined or not, satellite will keep growing as long as the mega-companies keep cutting programming. People will always go back to local radio when there's a good reason...
Let me note that, now that I'm in Mississippi, I hardly ever turn to local radio. Why? It stinks, that's why. The music stations are satellite fed (so much for that oft-touted 'local content'!) and are the most poorly computer-run ordeals I've ever heard. I gave our oldies outlet a try. Good satellite format, not too many commercials, a great song comes on and then in the middle.... *silence* After a moment, I'm greeted with phone-line hum and the muffled sounds of a local basketball game play-by-play. Blech. They could've at least warned me first. :-[
Some nearby towns
do have great local content, on AM... But most are too weak to be received here in my town. I'll usually check them out when travelling, though.
Some things in that article are kind of misleading. The sidebar notes that HD "has digital sound as good as satellite radio." What? Satellite DOES NOT SOUND GOOD
! If I hadn't read otherwise on here and elsewhere, that alone would keep me from ever 'upgrading' to HD. I put up with the crappy sound quality because it's stuff I can't get elsewhere, or take with me across the entire continent (which I do from time to time). When I'm at home and want music, I'll listen to XM on DirecTV, where the channels actually sound
good.
The author keeps referring to HD as 'high definition' which is an absolute insult. There is nothing high definition about 96 kbps, no matter how good Mike says it sounds.
The NAB and RIAA can heavy-hand satellite radio and internet streams, squeezing them to failure, but they ain't gonna stop the iPod. I hate the things, but they will be the ultimate radio killer, if it ever comes down to it.