On Mar 26, 2:58�pm, D Peter Maus wrote:
wrote:
On Mar 26, 2:33?pm, D Peter Maus wrote:
wrote:
On Mar 26, 2:13?pm, D Peter Maus wrote:
? ? Open discussion...before the Congress, no less...about HD Radio's
opportunity for subscription radio. From the outset, this has been
discussed by Radio's higher echelons, and digital hardware
manufacturers, even before the formation of iBiquity. It has been
proffered by iBiquity brass, discussed among station General Manglers,
denied by many, but now it's out on the table for all to see.
? ? From AllAccess.com
Sirius/XM On HD Radio: See? It's Competition!
The FCC decision underlines that HD Radio on the AM/FM bands provide a
real alternative to satellite ...
SIRIUS SATELLITE RADIO and XM SATELLITE RADIO issued a joint statement
on the FCC's issuance of its final rules for HD RADIO, saying, "The FCC
decision underlines that HD RADIO on the AM/FM bands provides a real
alternative to satellite and that the current audio entertainment market
is broad, robust and competitive. The decision will raise competition to
a new level by stimulating the growth in HD RADIO stations (now 1,200),
enhancing its offerings to consumers and establishing a process for free
radio to offer a paid subscription service for the first time."
SIRIUS CEO MEL KARMAZIN has been raising HD RADIO and its capability for
subscription services as an example of the competition between
terrestrial and satellite radio, most recently at this week's Senate
antitrust panel.
? ? What does this have to do with shortwave? ?Consider the number of SW
broadcasters who've left the air for internet distribution, or satellite
distribution--many not on Sirius or XM. ?And with DRM's spotty support
among broadcasters, the HD Radio decision is casting a forward shadow on
international broadcasting's future.
? ? SW broadcasting is expensive, and profitless. Even the great
stations like WNYW, run by proven commercially successful broadcasters
like Bonneville couldn't make it work. However, with the spectre of
subscription radio now reaching the OTA marketplace, there may be
opportunity for SW broadcasters to finally recoup costs by charging a
subscription fee....for Satellite, Internet, AND radio access.
? ? Meaning, you're entitled to only as much information as you PAY FOR.
And, that you pay for the propaganda you receive in the bargain.
? ? Being a rampant capitalist and a strong proponent of the freemarket,
as well as being converative two steps to the right of Rush Limbaugh,
this even makes MY skin crawl.
? ? There were some great PSA's in the 70's, about supporting free (free
and in content, not free as in cost) radio. And the message was most
effectively articulated by Roger Miller in one of these spots when he
said, 'no one has ever successfully taken over a country without first
taking over all the radio stations.'
? ? Free information threatens to become a thing of the past.
Luckily, the FCC has left HD/IBOC up to the marketplace to decide:
"FCC Adopts IBOC Ruling"
http://beradio.com/currents/radio-currents-031907/#iboc
One notable quote:
"Because the ruling does not include mandates for stations to commence
IBOC operations, it's allowing the market to decide. Stations that
oppose the system still have the choice not to adopt the technology."
So far, consumers have been voting with closed wallets !
? ? And let's hope that continues.
? ? Currently, there are a lot of practical questions to IBOC that are
not being satisfactorily answered for everyone. As the shake-out
continues, and systems become more refined, and as the listeners, who
have largely become used to the idea of taking what they get and liking
it, while being openly ignorned, become resigned to digital radio as
their option, the questions and objections being currently raised will
fall by the wayside and be forgotten.
? ? Remember, it was FCC, itself, that mandated a digital modulation
scheme for broadcast.
? ? It's only a matter of time before digital is implemented by command.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
But, the point is to let the marketplace decide, before anything is
mandated - if IBOC is mandated, with no one listening, the broadcast
bands are doomed.
* *If digital is mandated, there will be a lot of ****ing and moaning,
but once mandated, manufacturers will move into high gear to provide
listening hardware, because there will be guaranteed money in it. and
listeners will make the migration.
* *Letting the marketplace decide may, indeed, not produce iBiquity's,
or FCC's desired result. Because, as you say, there's no one listening.
* *That's where the mandate will come from.
* *Keep top of mind that FCC is committed to digital broadcasting. It
will do what it takes to get there.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
There is no proof that listeners would spend money on expensive HD
Radios. This was tried in Canada, with DAB, but as we can see, it
failed due to lack of consumer interest:
"Digital radio in Canada"
"The Commission is very concerned about the stalled DRB transition.
Roughly 15 of the 76 authorized stations (including the digital-only
operation in Toronto) are not on the air. Some stations that once
operated have since ceased operations. Few recievers have been sold,
and there is no interest in expanding DRB service beyond the six
cities where it exists. Since DRB transmitters have only been built in
the largest cities, motorists travelling between Quebec and Windsor,
between Calgary and Edmonton, or between Vancouver and south-central
British Columbia lose DRB reception. As a result, automakers have
switched their support from terrestrial DRB to XM/Sirius satellite
radio."
http://americanbandscan.blogspot.com...in-canada.html
The same thing is happening in the US - even if manufacturers move
into high-gear, that is not going to force consumers to buy digital
radios. Consumers are already moving onto other technologies, and a
digital mandate would only doom the broadcast bands. The probelm with
HD Radio is not lack of distribution, but a lack of consumer up-take.