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I bought XM radio service just before Christmas (December 2003), so my
experience is not even a year long. However, in my case, getting XM changed my radio listening habits around 98%. The *only* time I have my radio on (regular) FM is Saturday mornings at 10:00am for NPR's Car Talk. With that exception, my XM is always in use. Once XM adds channel 133 in September (Public Radio stuff) I may not even need to do that. If you take n=100 meaning the time that I am listening to the XM signal, I would guess about 40% of the time I am listening to XM talk stations (usually CSPAN or the comedy channels, occasionally CNBC and CNN, every now and then Fox). The remaining 60% is music, and that varies based on my mood and the time of day. Absolutely the #1 selling point for me was reception *everywhere*. MountAINS OF Pennsylvania, coast of North Carolina, never any fadeouts or other reception issues. (Well, I shouldn't say NEVER. On some roads, like the Pa. TUrnpike where there are hills right next to the road, the satellite can't see the antenna and I get occasional dropout. But almost perfect, and far better than AM or FM. Since PBS went commercial, I get more for my $10/month on XM than I ever did with a membership to a public radio station. -- Ted Koppel |
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