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![]() wrote in message ups.com... On Mar 30, 7:18 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "richllewis" wrote in message oups.com... One reason is there are several areas outside the big cities that HD Radio is very sparse. Here in Central Mississippi where I am the only HD station is a college station in Jackson, Ms. and no commercial broadcasters have gotten on the bandwagon just yet. You have to live in earshot of New Orleans, Mobile, or Memphis to enjoy HD radio. If what you are telling me is right, the rural areas will suffer with HD Radio. Now in Mississippi we have a lot of rural area where we here conventional FM stations that carry a long way. I suspect there are a lot of areas in the country that have a lot of rural areas that are like this. By concentrating your marketing in the big cities, you don't give the rest of the country a chance to make their own decision on this topic. As far as rural America is concerned this may be the future, but the mass market has not bloomed yet. Any station in any market can license and install HD. However, since the economics of small markets limit capital expenditures, I believe most such markets are waiting for prices to come down and for more receivers to be sold. The average annual gross income of a US radio station is around a quarter million dollars. Yet in LA, 25 or more stations bill over $20 million each. The top 10 markets have 30% of all the revenue. Half of all US radio stations are not profitable, so expect the smaller ones to be very slow in adopting HD. Yet in the top 100 markets, we average 15 stations per market already in HD... and two thirds of the US population is in those 100 markets. In other words, it's about the priorities of commercial radio. It took 5 years to get the first 100 FM stereo stations going after stereo was authorized, so look for a long wait in small markets. Yeah, but FM stereo was an improvement. HD, on the other hand, is QRM. I think (at least in part) what the OP was talking about is that there are still MANY rural areas of the country that have NO radio stations of their own. Also, the above is true. FM stereo (as well as AM stereo), color TV and stereo TV were all improvements. None of them made a signiifcant impact upon their respective core technologies. People can still listen to mono FM and watch TV in B/W. IBOC is not a backward compatible technology in the true sense of the concept, in that audio bandwidths have had to be reduced significantly in order to implement it. It also causes interference to first and second adjacent channels. This is engineering FACT. Not supposition. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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