> Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
> IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
> of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
> will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> > > There is zero demand for this.
> > Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
> > IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
> > of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
> > will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
> Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> > > > There is zero demand for this.
> > > Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
> > > IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
> > > of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
> > > will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
> > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> the point is you are lazy and want you dx handed to you whine jerk
Get help!
dxAce
Michigan
USA
> > > There is zero demand for this.
> > Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
> > IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
> > of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
> > will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
> Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
http://www.redwaveradio.com/
> > > > There is zero demand for this.
> > > Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
> > > IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
> > > of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
> > > will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
> > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> Boy, you really missed the point !
LMFAO
dxAce
Michigan
USA
> The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
This past week, XM Canada entered into an agreement with a cellphone
carrier to distribute XM on cellphones.
I hadn't thought about my cellphone much. I tend not to carry it
unless I"m specifically expecting a call from someone I want to hear
from. Otherwise it sits on my desk. But when I read about the XM Canada
deal, I realized that my cellphone has not only an FM radio built in,
but internet access.
See where this is going?
Eric Richards made a good, and rather vocal, point--that currently,
there are alternatives to terrestrial radio. There's internet radio. The
iPod is ubiquitous. And now handles everything from ripped CD tracks to
network TV shows. More stations are podcasting. Thousands are streaming.
XM and Sirius are carrying whole radio stations, now, with more in
negotiation.
Last month was announced the first standalone internet radio. No PC
required. You can simply plug your broadband connection into the back
and select from thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Internet Radio
stations.
And commercial broadcasters are beginning to sign on to every one of
these alternative methods of delivery. Which raises a real interesting
question:
Who needs the headache and expense of maintaining a full power
broadcast audio channel?
Now, I've heard IBOC. I'm not impressed. What I've heard has not met
the expectations claimed for it. That may change. But then, again,
maybe not. The real benefits of digital audio/broacast are not in audio
quality--that's subjective and debatable till we all meet at
Milliways--the benefits of digital are in management and distribution.
And THAT means profitabiltiy. Any audio can be put anywhere, sent in
seconds, even pulled from an archive without a human attendant. In
precisely the quality with which it was put there. Regardless of the
source, transmission, or end user hardware. For the one-time cost of the
hardware.
What IBOC does, that no one has substantively addressed, is it puts
into play a high tech solution for the ever increasing recurring costs
of maintaining a transmitter. IBOC uses a fraction of the power of a
broadcast transmitter to cover about the same area. Broadcast
Manglement comes at that thought. The idea of being able to put their
signal out there, and cut the power bill by 50% makes GMs wet and
throbbing. Lower cost, higher profit. Local radio stays local. And IBOC
becomes only ONE of an ever increasing number of ways for listeners to
interact with the Radio Station. The transmitter becomes one channel of
distribution.
And when you've got the ability to pull the station out of the air
with your cell phone, a portable satellite receiver, or an IBOC radio,
what really does that mean for IBOC generated interference on a band
where most of us admit, the pickin's is so slim that we have to tune out
of market to find something listenable.
Kind of renders the point moot. And there are more methods of
distribution being created every day. Meaning, that terrestrial radio is
becoming less important as a source. One of many. One that's rapidly
slipping from the most convenient and ubiquitous, to more inconvenient,
and easy to overlook.
Now, for us, that blows. We enjoy the process of setting up, and
capturing, with some anonymity, the content of our choosing, even if it
is found across the country. And doing it for no more than the cost of
our own ingenuity, and what hardware we build/buy.
Those days are coming to a close. At least with the toys we currently
have.
And as for DRM.....I've heard DRM. It was, in a word, impressive.
Still not FM quality. But close enough. Full bandwidth music, in
stereo, on shortwave. Hoodathunkit? And yet, there it was.
And again, requiring less energy to distribute to the same target.
SW broadcasters have been on the internet, and satellite, now for a
decade. The actual transmitters, as with MW transmitters, are becoming
just another outlet. Just another method of distribution. DRM
interference, is just another minor annoyance for a service that's lost
it's place in the pantheon of content distribution options.
A little short sighted in some cases. Especially, as we learned from
Galaxy 5, that distribution in the hands of 3rd parties can leave
broadcasters severely cut off. But short sightedness is the order of the
day. Especially when there are budgets to be cut. And bonuses to be
collected. And given that many of our international broadcasters exist
to present sources of information alternative to domestic
media...well...trashing shortwave also allows political influence on
content by controlling access. Something, we, as SWL's, have understood
since WWII.
Timetables? Good question. Terrestrial radio companies needs to find
ways to make alternative outlets profitable with advertising support.
Believe me, they're working on it. When the model is finally
struck...and it won't come from the broadcasters...it will, as always,
come from the advertisers, things will evolve pretty quickly.
Radio will survive. Not in a form we recognize, perhaps, but it will
survive.
So, yeah, when IBOC goes full time, things will be a mess.
You see, Richards was right....we, as listeners have alternatives.
So, actually, now, do the broadcasters.
As far as the interference goes...the broadcasters...the FCC....
They don't care.
They don't have to.
> > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> Which kind of underscores something that has been alluded to, but
> never really stated outright, until this past couple of weeks....
> This past week, XM Canada entered into an agreement with a cellphone
> carrier to distribute XM on cellphones.
> I hadn't thought about my cellphone much. I tend not to carry it
> unless I"m specifically expecting a call from someone I want to hear
> from. Otherwise it sits on my desk. But when I read about the XM Canada
> deal, I realized that my cellphone has not only an FM radio built in,
> but internet access.
> See where this is going?
> Eric Richards made a good, and rather vocal, point--that currently,
> there are alternatives to terrestrial radio. There's internet radio. The
> iPod is ubiquitous. And now handles everything from ripped CD tracks to
> network TV shows. More stations are podcasting. Thousands are streaming.
> XM and Sirius are carrying whole radio stations, now, with more in
> negotiation.
> Last month was announced the first standalone internet radio. No PC
> required. You can simply plug your broadband connection into the back
> and select from thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Internet Radio
> stations.
> And commercial broadcasters are beginning to sign on to every one of
> these alternative methods of delivery. Which raises a real interesting
> question:
> Who needs the headache and expense of maintaining a full power
> broadcast audio channel?
> Now, I've heard IBOC. I'm not impressed. What I've heard has not met
> the expectations claimed for it. That may change. But then, again,
> maybe not. The real benefits of digital audio/broacast are not in audio
> quality--that's subjective and debatable till we all meet at
> Milliways--the benefits of digital are in management and distribution.
> And THAT means profitabiltiy. Any audio can be put anywhere, sent in
> seconds, even pulled from an archive without a human attendant. In
> precisely the quality with which it was put there. Regardless of the
> source, transmission, or end user hardware. For the one-time cost of the
> hardware.
> What IBOC does, that no one has substantively addressed, is it puts
> into play a high tech solution for the ever increasing recurring costs
> of maintaining a transmitter. IBOC uses a fraction of the power of a
> broadcast transmitter to cover about the same area. Broadcast
> Manglement comes at that thought. The idea of being able to put their
> signal out there, and cut the power bill by 50% makes GMs wet and
> throbbing. Lower cost, higher profit. Local radio stays local. And IBOC
> becomes only ONE of an ever increasing number of ways for listeners to
> interact with the Radio Station. The transmitter becomes one channel of
> distribution.
> And when you've got the ability to pull the station out of the air
> with your cell phone, a portable satellite receiver, or an IBOC radio,
> what really does that mean for IBOC generated interference on a band
> where most of us admit, the pickin's is so slim that we have to tune out
> of market to find something listenable.
> Kind of renders the point moot. And there are more methods of
> distribution being created every day. Meaning, that terrestrial radio is
> becoming less important as a source. One of many. One that's rapidly
> slipping from the most convenient and ubiquitous, to more inconvenient,
> and easy to overlook.
> Now, for us, that blows. We enjoy the process of setting up, and
> capturing, with some anonymity, the content of our choosing, even if it
> is found across the country. And doing it for no more than the cost of
> our own ingenuity, and what hardware we build/buy.
> Those days are coming to a close. At least with the toys we currently
> have.
> And as for DRM.....I've heard DRM. It was, in a word, impressive.
> Still not FM quality. But close enough. Full bandwidth music, in
> stereo, on shortwave. Hoodathunkit? And yet, there it was.
> And again, requiring less energy to distribute to the same target.
> SW broadcasters have been on the internet, and satellite, now for a
> decade. The actual transmitters, as with MW transmitters, are becoming
> just another outlet. Just another method of distribution. DRM
> interference, is just another minor annoyance for a service that's lost
> it's place in the pantheon of content distribution options.
> A little short sighted in some cases. Especially, as we learned from
> Galaxy 5, that distribution in the hands of 3rd parties can leave
> broadcasters severely cut off. But short sightedness is the order of the
> day. Especially when there are budgets to be cut. And bonuses to be
> collected. And given that many of our international broadcasters exist
> to present sources of information alternative to domestic
> media...well...trashing shortwave also allows political influence on
> content by controlling access. Something, we, as SWL's, have understood
> since WWII.
> Timetables? Good question. Terrestrial radio companies needs to find
> ways to make alternative outlets profitable with advertising support.
> Believe me, they're working on it. When the model is finally
> struck...and it won't come from the broadcasters...it will, as always,
> come from the advertisers, things will evolve pretty quickly.
> Radio will survive. Not in a form we recognize, perhaps, but it will
> survive.
> So, yeah, when IBOC goes full time, things will be a mess.
> You see, Richards was right....we, as listeners have alternatives.
> So, actually, now, do the broadcasters.
> As far as the interference goes...the broadcasters...the FCC....
> They don't care.
> They don't have to.
Always follow the $$$
dxAce
Michigan
USA
> > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people have heard
> > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night it's
> > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> Which kind of underscores something that has been alluded to, but
> never really stated outright, until this past couple of weeks....
> This past week, XM Canada entered into an agreement with a cellphone
> carrier to distribute XM on cellphones.
> I hadn't thought about my cellphone much. I tend not to carry it
> unless I"m specifically expecting a call from someone I want to hear
> from. Otherwise it sits on my desk. But when I read about the XM Canada
> deal, I realized that my cellphone has not only an FM radio built in,
> but internet access.
> See where this is going?
> Eric Richards made a good, and rather vocal, point--that currently,
> there are alternatives to terrestrial radio. There's internet radio. The
> iPod is ubiquitous. And now handles everything from ripped CD tracks to
> network TV shows. More stations are podcasting. Thousands are streaming.
> XM and Sirius are carrying whole radio stations, now, with more in
> negotiation.
> Last month was announced the first standalone internet radio. No PC
> required. You can simply plug your broadband connection into the back
> and select from thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Internet Radio
> stations.
> And commercial broadcasters are beginning to sign on to every one of
> these alternative methods of delivery. Which raises a real interesting
> question:
> Who needs the headache and expense of maintaining a full power
> broadcast audio channel?
> Now, I've heard IBOC. I'm not impressed. What I've heard has not met
> the expectations claimed for it. That may change. But then, again,
> maybe not. The real benefits of digital audio/broacast are not in audio
> quality--that's subjective and debatable till we all meet at
> Milliways--the benefits of digital are in management and distribution.
> And THAT means profitabiltiy. Any audio can be put anywhere, sent in
> seconds, even pulled from an archive without a human attendant. In
> precisely the quality with which it was put there. Regardless of the
> source, transmission, or end user hardware. For the one-time cost of the
> hardware.
> What IBOC does, that no one has substantively addressed, is it puts
> into play a high tech solution for the ever increasing recurring costs
> of maintaining a transmitter. IBOC uses a fraction of the power of a
> broadcast transmitter to cover about the same area. Broadcast
> Manglement comes at that thought. The idea of being able to put their
> signal out there, and cut the power bill by 50% makes GMs wet and
> throbbing. Lower cost, higher profit. Local radio stays local. And IBOC
> becomes only ONE of an ever increasing number of ways for listeners to
> interact with the Radio Station. The transmitter becomes one channel of
> distribution.
> And when you've got the ability to pull the station out of the air
> with your cell phone, a portable satellite receiver, or an IBOC radio,
> what really does that mean for IBOC generated interference on a band
> where most of us admit, the pickin's is so slim that we have to tune out
> of market to find something listenable.
> Kind of renders the point moot. And there are more methods of
> distribution being created every day. Meaning, that terrestrial radio is
> becoming less important as a source. One of many. One that's rapidly
> slipping from the most convenient and ubiquitous, to more inconvenient,
> and easy to overlook.
> Now, for us, that blows. We enjoy the process of setting up, and
> capturing, with some anonymity, the content of our choosing, even if it
> is found across the country. And doing it for no more than the cost of
> our own ingenuity, and what hardware we build/buy.
> Those days are coming to a close. At least with the toys we currently
> have.
> And as for DRM.....I've heard DRM. It was, in a word, impressive.
> Still not FM quality. But close enough. Full bandwidth music, in
> stereo, on shortwave. Hoodathunkit? And yet, there it was.
> And again, requiring less energy to distribute to the same target.
> SW broadcasters have been on the internet, and satellite, now for a
> decade. The actual transmitters, as with MW transmitters, are becoming
> just another outlet. Just another method of distribution. DRM
> interference, is just another minor annoyance for a service that's lost
> it's place in the pantheon of content distribution options.
> A little short sighted in some cases. Especially, as we learned from
> Galaxy 5, that distribution in the hands of 3rd parties can leave
> broadcasters severely cut off. But short sightedness is the order of the
> day. Especially when there are budgets to be cut. And bonuses to be
> collected. And given that many of our international broadcasters exist
> to present sources of information alternative to domestic
> media...well...trashing shortwave also allows political influence on
> content by controlling access. Something, we, as SWL's, have understood
> since WWII.
> Timetables? Good question. Terrestrial radio companies needs to find
> ways to make alternative outlets profitable with advertising support.
> Believe me, they're working on it. When the model is finally
> struck...and it won't come from the broadcasters...it will, as always,
> come from the advertisers, things will evolve pretty quickly.
> Radio will survive. Not in a form we recognize, perhaps, but it will
> survive.
> So, yeah, when IBOC goes full time, things will be a mess.
> You see, Richards was right....we, as listeners have alternatives.
> So, actually, now, do the broadcasters.
> As far as the interference goes...the broadcasters...the FCC....
> They don't care.
> They don't have to.
> > > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most
people have heard
> > > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on
at night it's
> > > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other
factors.
> > Which kind of underscores something that has been alluded to,
but
> > never really stated outright, until this past couple of weeks....
> > This past week, XM Canada entered into an agreement with a
cellphone
> > carrier to distribute XM on cellphones.
> > I hadn't thought about my cellphone much. I tend not to carry
it
> > unless I"m specifically expecting a call from someone I want to
hear
> > from. Otherwise it sits on my desk. But when I read about the XM
Canada
> > deal, I realized that my cellphone has not only an FM radio built
in,
> > but internet access.
> > See where this is going?
> > Eric Richards made a good, and rather vocal, point--that
currently,
> > there are alternatives to terrestrial radio. There's internet
radio. The
> > iPod is ubiquitous. And now handles everything from ripped CD
tracks to
> > network TV shows. More stations are podcasting. Thousands are
streaming.
> > XM and Sirius are carrying whole radio stations, now, with more in
> > negotiation.
> > Last month was announced the first standalone internet radio.
No PC
> > required. You can simply plug your broadband connection into the
back
> > and select from thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Internet
Radio
> > stations.
> > And commercial broadcasters are beginning to sign on to every
one of
> > these alternative methods of delivery. Which raises a real
interesting
> > question:
> > Who needs the headache and expense of maintaining a full
power
> > broadcast audio channel?
> > Now, I've heard IBOC. I'm not impressed. What I've heard has
not met
> > the expectations claimed for it. That may change. But then,
again,
> > maybe not. The real benefits of digital audio/broacast are not in
audio
> > quality--that's subjective and debatable till we all meet at
> > Milliways--the benefits of digital are in management and
distribution.
> > And THAT means profitabiltiy. Any audio can be put anywhere, sent
in
> > seconds, even pulled from an archive without a human attendant. In
> > precisely the quality with which it was put there. Regardless of
the
> > source, transmission, or end user hardware. For the one-time cost
of the
> > hardware.
> > What IBOC does, that no one has substantively addressed, is it
puts
> > into play a high tech solution for the ever increasing recurring
costs
> > of maintaining a transmitter. IBOC uses a fraction of the power of
a
> > broadcast transmitter to cover about the same area. Broadcast
> > Manglement comes at that thought. The idea of being able to put
their
> > signal out there, and cut the power bill by 50% makes GMs wet and
> > throbbing. Lower cost, higher profit. Local radio stays local. And
IBOC
> > becomes only ONE of an ever increasing number of ways for
listeners to
> > interact with the Radio Station. The transmitter becomes one
channel of
> > distribution.
> > And when you've got the ability to pull the station out of the
air
> > with your cell phone, a portable satellite receiver, or an IBOC
radio,
> > what really does that mean for IBOC generated interference on a
band
> > where most of us admit, the pickin's is so slim that we have to
tune out
> > of market to find something listenable.
> > Kind of renders the point moot. And there are more methods of
> > distribution being created every day. Meaning, that terrestrial
radio is
> > becoming less important as a source. One of many. One that's
rapidly
> > slipping from the most convenient and ubiquitous, to more
inconvenient,
> > and easy to overlook.
> > Now, for us, that blows. We enjoy the process of setting up,
and
> > capturing, with some anonymity, the content of our choosing, even
if it
> > is found across the country. And doing it for no more than the
cost of
> > our own ingenuity, and what hardware we build/buy.
> > Those days are coming to a close. At least with the toys we
currently
> > have.
> > And as for DRM.....I've heard DRM. It was, in a word,
impressive.
> > Still not FM quality. But close enough. Full bandwidth music, in
> > stereo, on shortwave. Hoodathunkit? And yet, there it was.
> > And again, requiring less energy to distribute to the same
target.
> > SW broadcasters have been on the internet, and satellite, now
for a
> > decade. The actual transmitters, as with MW transmitters, are
becoming
> > just another outlet. Just another method of distribution. DRM
> > interference, is just another minor annoyance for a service that's
lost
> > it's place in the pantheon of content distribution options.
> > A little short sighted in some cases. Especially, as we learned
from
> > Galaxy 5, that distribution in the hands of 3rd parties can leave
> > broadcasters severely cut off. But short sightedness is the order
of the
> > day. Especially when there are budgets to be cut. And bonuses to
be
> > collected. And given that many of our international broadcasters
exist
> > to present sources of information alternative to domestic
> > media...well...trashing shortwave also allows political influence
on
> > content by controlling access. Something, we, as SWL's, have
understood
> > since WWII.
> > Timetables? Good question. Terrestrial radio companies needs to
find
> > ways to make alternative outlets profitable with advertising
support.
> > Believe me, they're working on it. When the model is finally
> > struck...and it won't come from the broadcasters...it will, as
always,
> > come from the advertisers, things will evolve pretty quickly.
> > Radio will survive. Not in a form we recognize, perhaps, but it
will
> > survive.
> > So, yeah, when IBOC goes full time, things will be a mess.
> > You see, Richards was right....we, as listeners have
alternatives.
> > So, actually, now, do the broadcasters.
> > As far as the interference goes...the broadcasters...the
FCC....
> > They don't care.
> > They don't have to.
> There will be a slew of objections, from interfered stations, to the
> FCC and lawsuits. The stations have the option of turning off IBOC,
> which some of them already have. I have never heard that, dfor
example,
> a 50K watt analog only stations, will be able to reduce its power
> comsumption, by running IBOC. Also, it has been shown that IBOC
does
> not have the coverage, or penetration, of analog.
--Mike L.
> > the point is you are lazy and want you dx handed to you whine jerk
> The point, in your case, is that you're one screwed up individual.
that is your lie
you are lazty afraid to work for what you want
for?Quote:> Get help!
telling the truth about you? oh lazy one
Quote:> dxAce
> Michigan
> USA
> > > > Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most
> people have heard
> > > > about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
> > > > The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on
> at night it's
> > > > going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other
> factors.
> > > Which kind of underscores something that has been alluded to,
> but
> > > never really stated outright, until this past couple of weeks....
> > > This past week, XM Canada entered into an agreement with a
> cellphone
> > > carrier to distribute XM on cellphones.
> > > I hadn't thought about my cellphone much. I tend not to carry
> it
> > > unless I"m specifically expecting a call from someone I want to
> hear
> > > from. Otherwise it sits on my desk. But when I read about the XM
> Canada
> > > deal, I realized that my cellphone has not only an FM radio built
> in,
> > > but internet access.
> > > See where this is going?
> > > Eric Richards made a good, and rather vocal, point--that
> currently,
> > > there are alternatives to terrestrial radio. There's internet
> radio. The
> > > iPod is ubiquitous. And now handles everything from ripped CD
> tracks to
> > > network TV shows. More stations are podcasting. Thousands are
> streaming.
> > > XM and Sirius are carrying whole radio stations, now, with more in
> > > negotiation.
> > > Last month was announced the first standalone internet radio.
> No PC
> > > required. You can simply plug your broadband connection into the
> back
> > > and select from thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Internet
> Radio
> > > stations.
> > > And commercial broadcasters are beginning to sign on to every
> one of
> > > these alternative methods of delivery. Which raises a real
> interesting
> > > question:
> > > Who needs the headache and expense of maintaining a full
> power
> > > broadcast audio channel?
> > > Now, I've heard IBOC. I'm not impressed. What I've heard has
> not met
> > > the expectations claimed for it. That may change. But then,
> again,
> > > maybe not. The real benefits of digital audio/broacast are not in
> audio
> > > quality--that's subjective and debatable till we all meet at
> > > Milliways--the benefits of digital are in management and
> distribution.
> > > And THAT means profitabiltiy. Any audio can be put anywhere, sent
> in
> > > seconds, even pulled from an archive without a human attendant. In
> > > precisely the quality with which it was put there. Regardless of
> the
> > > source, transmission, or end user hardware. For the one-time cost
> of the
> > > hardware.
> > > What IBOC does, that no one has substantively addressed, is it
> puts
> > > into play a high tech solution for the ever increasing recurring
> costs
> > > of maintaining a transmitter. IBOC uses a fraction of the power of
> a
> > > broadcast transmitter to cover about the same area. Broadcast
> > > Manglement comes at that thought. The idea of being able to put
> their
> > > signal out there, and cut the power bill by 50% makes GMs wet and
> > > throbbing. Lower cost, higher profit. Local radio stays local. And
> IBOC
> > > becomes only ONE of an ever increasing number of ways for
> listeners to
> > > interact with the Radio Station. The transmitter becomes one
> channel of
> > > distribution.
> > > And when you've got the ability to pull the station out of the
> air
> > > with your cell phone, a portable satellite receiver, or an IBOC
> radio,
> > > what really does that mean for IBOC generated interference on a
> band
> > > where most of us admit, the pickin's is so slim that we have to
> tune out
> > > of market to find something listenable.
> > > Kind of renders the point moot. And there are more methods of
> > > distribution being created every day. Meaning, that terrestrial
> radio is
> > > becoming less important as a source. One of many. One that's
> rapidly
> > > slipping from the most convenient and ubiquitous, to more
> inconvenient,
> > > and easy to overlook.
> > > Now, for us, that blows. We enjoy the process of setting up,
> and
> > > capturing, with some anonymity, the content of our choosing, even
> if it
> > > is found across the country. And doing it for no more than the
> cost of
> > > our own ingenuity, and what hardware we build/buy.
> > > Those days are coming to a close. At least with the toys we
> currently
> > > have.
> > > And as for DRM.....I've heard DRM. It was, in a word,
> impressive.
> > > Still not FM quality. But close enough. Full bandwidth music, in
> > > stereo, on shortwave. Hoodathunkit? And yet, there it was.
> > > And again, requiring less energy to distribute to the same
> target.
> > > SW broadcasters have been on the internet, and satellite, now
> for a
> > > decade. The actual transmitters, as with MW transmitters, are
> becoming
> > > just another outlet. Just another method of distribution. DRM
> > > interference, is just another minor annoyance for a service that's
> lost
> > > it's place in the pantheon of content distribution options.
> > > A little short sighted in some cases. Especially, as we learned
> from
> > > Galaxy 5, that distribution in the hands of 3rd parties can leave
> > > broadcasters severely cut off. But short sightedness is the order
> of the
> > > day. Especially when there are budgets to be cut. And bonuses to
> be
> > > collected. And given that many of our international broadcasters
> exist
> > > to present sources of information alternative to domestic
> > > media...well...trashing shortwave also allows political influence
> on
> > > content by controlling access. Something, we, as SWL's, have
> understood
> > > since WWII.
> > > Timetables? Good question. Terrestrial radio companies needs to
> find
> > > ways to make alternative outlets profitable with advertising
> support.
> > > Believe me, they're working on it. When the model is finally
> > > struck...and it won't come from the broadcasters...it will, as
> always,
> > > come from the advertisers, things will evolve pretty quickly.
> > > Radio will survive. Not in a form we recognize, perhaps, but it
> will
> > > survive.
> > > So, yeah, when IBOC goes full time, things will be a mess.
> > > You see, Richards was right....we, as listeners have
> alternatives.
> > > So, actually, now, do the broadcasters.
> > > As far as the interference goes...the broadcasters...the
> FCC....
> > > They don't care.
> > > They don't have to.
> > There will be a slew of objections, from interfered stations, to the
> > FCC and lawsuits. The stations have the option of turning off IBOC,
> > which some of them already have. I have never heard that, dfor
> example,
> > a 50K watt analog only stations, will be able to reduce its power
> > comsumption, by running IBOC. Also, it has been shown that IBOC
> does
> > not have the coverage, or penetration, of analog.
> Hmm. The flamethrowers locally (1530 and 700) like to
> spout off how many watts they transmit with. It'll
> take a pretty big change of attitude at those stations.
> --Mike L.
>> > > There is zero demand for this.
>> > Yes, you are right; that is why I am not too concerned about nighttime
>> > IBOC approval, despite what all the rumor mongers say. Only a handful
>> > of stores are carrying only one HD radio; with satellite radio, there
>> > will be no demand; most people have not even heard of HD radio.
>> Whether or not the radios are available or whether or not most people
>> have heard
>> about HD radio is not the point, shit for brains.
>> The point is if the broadcasters are allowed to turn the ***on at night
>> it's
>> going to make one hell of a mess, regardless of any other factors.
> the point is you are lazy and want you dx handed to you whine jerk
1. With-Respect-To : IBOC AM Radio -vice- AM Radio DXing
2. A potential solution to IBOC interference.
4. Eye-On-IBOC - Looking for Information about IBOC and HD Radio
5. IBOC forces KSL-AM to drop decades-old tradition.
6. Nighttime AM broadcast band IBOC approved by FCC
7. Spectrum plot of an IBOC AM station
10. IBOC - Redefining AM Radio Service As We Know It