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#1
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On Jun 20, 2:16 am, RHF wrote:
On Jun 19, 10:55 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... DE - That was "KOAC" 550 kHz - in Corvallis, OR - which is part of the Oregon Public Radio System. DE - I am simply reporting on what I 'observed' last night on the Radio. Night HD is still not authorized. The FCC approved, but we are waiting for the publication in the Federal register for the FCC to give the go-ahead. KFI, for example, has not had HD on since their tower fell over 2 and a half years ago. DE, I am only reporting on what the Blinking Blue Light on the Radiosophy "HD100" Radio is telling me. digital, Digital. DIGITAL ! - Is In The House ~ RHF . . . . That blinking blue light means you are out-of-luck, a dumb-ass for buying an HD radio, and supporting the destuction of the AM broadcast band ! |
#2
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On Jun 20, 3:47 am, wrote:
On Jun 20, 2:16 am, RHF wrote: On Jun 19, 10:55 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... DE - That was "KOAC" 550 kHz - in Corvallis, OR - which is part of the Oregon Public Radio System. DE - I am simply reporting on what I 'observed' last night on the Radio. Night HD is still not authorized. The FCC approved, but we are waiting for the publication in the Federal register for the FCC to give the go-ahead. KFI, for example, has not had HD on since their tower fell over 2 and a half years ago. DE, I am only reporting on what the Blinking Blue Light on the Radiosophy "HD100" Radio is telling me. digital, Digital. DIGITAL ! - Is In The House ~ RHF . . . . That blinking blue light means you are out-of-luck, a dumb-ass for buying an HD radio, and supporting the destuction of the AM broadcast band !- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - ibocisacr, IBOC - Makes $en$e in the FM Band and the jury is still out for a few years as to whether IBOC will be a bust -or- the destruction of the AM/MW Band. Clearly for "Rural" Radio Listeners the Digital part of the AM & FM Broadcast Signal will have to be increased to reach the Listeners on the Fringe of the Radio Stations range. Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. of course that is just a dumb-ass opinion ~ RHF |
#3
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![]() "RHF" wrote in message ups.com... Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. Based on actually working with 40 or so HD stations, the current HD signal, on AM, covers to at least the same usable and used coverage area the analog signal reaches, sometimes more. On FM, it also reaches the same area where nearly all actual listening happens. |
#4
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![]() "David Eduardo" wrote in message t... "RHF" wrote in message ups.com... Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. Based on actually working with 40 or so HD stations, the current HD signal, on AM, covers to at least the same usable and used coverage area the analog signal reaches, sometimes more. On FM, it also reaches the same area where nearly all actual listening happens. There you go again saying that only those inside your precious city grade contours count as listeners. Probably 40-50 million people in the US would beg to differ. |
#5
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![]() "Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message t... "RHF" wrote in message ups.com... Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. Based on actually working with 40 or so HD stations, the current HD signal, on AM, covers to at least the same usable and used coverage area the analog signal reaches, sometimes more. On FM, it also reaches the same area where nearly all actual listening happens. There you go again saying that only those inside your precious city grade contours count as listeners. Probably 40-50 million people in the US would beg to differ. First, we are talking about AM, which now has, nationally, only about 19% of radio listening. Second, most of that percentage is in upper end demos, as under age 45, listenership is very small. What we have is a band that has serious issues about survival. In big cities, small cities and rural areas, there is very little use of AM outside the very strong signal contours. In fact, the national coverage by FM is far more dense than the AM coverage. If HD can help AM survive, it is a fair tradeoff. |
#6
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On Jun 22, 10:18 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message et... "RHF" wrote in message roups.com... Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. Based on actually working with 40 or so HD stations, the current HD signal, on AM, covers to at least the same usable and used coverage area the analog signal reaches, sometimes more. On FM, it also reaches the same area where nearly all actual listening happens. There you go again saying that only those inside your precious city grade contours count as listeners. Probably 40-50 million people in the US would beg to differ. First, we are talking about AM, which now has, nationally, only about 19% of radio listening. Second, most of that percentage is in upper end demos, as under age 45, listenership is very small. What we have is a band that has serious issues about survival. In big cities, small cities and rural areas, there is very little use of AM outside the very strong signal contours. In fact, the national coverage by FM is far more dense than the AM coverage. If HD can help AM survive, it is a fair tradeoff.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - DE, Then start writting the Obituary for AM/MW Radio in a good part of Rural America right now [.] -cause- The Digital Noise Level {Background Hash} from IBOC has made and impact on the Listenability of several California Central Valley AM/MW Radio Strations that I could pick-up and hear reasonably well 580 kHz - KMJ and 1530 kHz - KFBK come to mind. The Digital Noise Level {Background Hash} from IBOC seems to be increasing Week-by-Week : Which Will Kill Analog AM/MW Radio for sure within Three to Five Years. The "Only Two Alternatives for AM/MW Radio Are : 1 - Stop All "HD" Radio Digital {IBOC} Broadcasts - Now ! 2- Expedite the Transistion* to All "HD" Radio Digital {IBOC} Broadcasts -ASAP- * NOTE - Phase-Up Higher Powered AM/MW "HD" Radio Digital {IBOC} Broadcasts -and- Phase-Down Lower Powered AM/MW 'Analog' Radio Broadcasts. that's the way i hear it - with my own two ears ~ RHF |
#7
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![]() "RHF" wrote in message ups.com... Then start writting the Obituary for AM/MW Radio in a good part of Rural America right now [.] The owners of stations in metro areas don't care about listening outside the metro. They can not make any money from those listeners. On the other hand, if there is a chance to make AM more viable in the future and the only sacrifice is a handful of listeners outside the metro, that mean no income, then the trade is very one-sided. The FCC agrees. -cause- The Digital Noise Level {Background Hash} from IBOC has made and impact on the Listenability of several California Central Valley AM/MW Radio Strations that I could pick-up and hear reasonably well 580 kHz - KMJ and 1530 kHz - KFBK come to mind. Where are you? If you are not in the metro area of the station, the station really does not care. They do care about surviving, though. |
#8
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On Jun 22, 10:18 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message et... "RHF" wrote in message roups.com... Phasing in and Increase of the Digital Signal over Time would ease the Transition to HD Radio. First Year 1% Digital Second Year 2% Digital Third Year 4% Digital Fourth Year 8% Digital Fifth Year 16% Digital A 16% Digital Signal should give a HD Radio Station a Signal Coverage Area far better then their present Analog Signal Coverage Area. Based on actually working with 40 or so HD stations, the current HD signal, on AM, covers to at least the same usable and used coverage area the analog signal reaches, sometimes more. On FM, it also reaches the same area where nearly all actual listening happens. There you go again saying that only those inside your precious city grade contours count as listeners. Probably 40-50 million people in the US would beg to differ. First, we are talking about AM, which now has, nationally, only about 19% of radio listening. Second, most of that percentage is in upper end demos, as under age 45, listenership is very small. What we have is a band that has serious issues about survival. In big cities, small cities and rural areas, there is very little use of AM outside the very strong signal contours. In fact, the national coverage by FM is far more dense than the AM coverage. If HD can help AM survive, it is a fair tradeoff.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - DE - yes, Yes. YES - We Know - We Don't Count ~ RHF - - - and the Art {Hobby} of AM/MW Radio DXing is Obsolite due to Technological Advancement -ie- IBOC Broadcasting. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-band_on-channel |
#9
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![]() "RHF" wrote in message ups.com... - - - and the Art {Hobby} of AM/MW Radio DXing is Obsolite due to Technological Advancement -ie- IBOC Broadcasting. Considering that the total membership in AM DX clubs over the last decade is less than 1000 persons, I think the whole point is moot. |
#10
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RHF wrote:
- Show quoted text - DE - yes, Yes. YES - We Know - We Don't Count ~ RHF - - - and the Art {Hobby} of AM/MW Radio DXing is Obsolite due to Technological Advancement -ie- IBOC Broadcasting. We haven't counted since long before IBOC. Truth is, Radio has been disregarding us for decades. At least by degrees. Now, they don't even hear our voice. David isn't the one who makes these policies, or decides which numbers are to be excluded, he's only telling you what the reality is in the Radio biz. It sucks. And I"m not saying that it's right. Or even that it needs to be that way. Everything that you, and Ace, and Brenda Ann have said are legitimate concerns from the listener's perspective. I'm right there with you. But the industry just doesn't care. They don't have to. They churn out their sausages, their sausages sell. They take their money and go buy expensive toys. They don't care. They don't have to. And like the ever declining level of customer service in every line of business, these days, this thinking is so commonplace and so prevalent, that the public has simply come to accept it as the norm. In some cases, they even accept it as the right way. Look at Microsoft. And the huge number of people who will defend them and their contemptuous business practices to the last drop of their own blood. They don't care. They're simply too big to need to. So, people who have had it, exit the Microsoft world for Linux. Or Solaris. Or FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and in some cases, UNIX itself. Or the blossoming Mac world. And like Microsoft, Radio is seeing an ever increasing number of dissatisfied listeners who exit to their iPods. Or CD players. Or satellite radio. I put a Peripheral iPod Interface in my car. I may go two, three weeks without tuning in. I have one colleague who took the radio out of his Highlander entirely. We don't listen to the radio when we go to hamfests. He's the one who took my job, when I left CBS. And we are not alone in our circles. It's only dinosaurs like us who understand the shortsightedness of the thinking, and the waste of potential that radio reflects, today, and the hazards of limiting communications availability and choice, that care anymore. It's only dinosaurs like us who understand the shortsightedness of putting all of it in the hands of one single company who can make decisions about the entire communications business, exclusively toward profit, with only token resistance from the stewards of the public trust that care the primary focus of the broadcasting companies, today is their stock price. Nothing else is as important. And we are in short supply. The business has done its research. And is convinced that what it's doing is the only way. Now, the reality of this research is that questionaires can be designed to produce exactly the desired outcome. I was involved in this kind of directed research at CBS. And I've been involved in focus group sessions that were also subtly directed to a desired outcome. And for a time, they worked. And the station flourished despite the chicanery. But then, again, we didn't have a head-on competitor. When one came along, the shortcomings of the research were apparent in the extreme, and they kicked the **** out of us with minimum wage disc jockeys and the lamest promotion department in the business. But they did what we wouldn't, and the listeners migrated in droves. They didn't last. Mel Karmazin opened up the treasury and we simply outspent them. And locked up every venue in the region for live concerts. And locked up demographic specific sponsors into exclusivity. Like Survivor, we outspent, out played and out lasted them. And when they were gone, only we remained. Haggard, and battle worn, but literally, within minutes of the announcement that they had spun the Wheel, we were back to our old ways. The corner office didn't care. It didn't have to. And most stations, today, are positioned so they don't have to face a head-on competitor. They can make just as much money doing things the way it's doing them as they can doing things the way that would include us in the service commitment. It's just less expensive and more risky to do things our way. And every analyst on Wall Street will tell you stockholders don't like risk, or expense. And no advertiser wants to roll the dice with their money on content that may be contrary to its interest. As Howard Stern learned, again, this past week on Sirius. The hard pill to swallow, here, is that Radio, in the US, has always been about the money. Always. Since the first grain elevator operators built amateur licensed transmitters to report their market prices, programming has only been there to hold listener attention between commercial messages. The public service commitment written into the rules came late. And from the outset was seen as an unfair burden to broadcasters who could make much more money without it. Today, the public service commitment is barely a token, and Radio is STILL listening to the advertisers...the ones with the money. And everything you hear on the radio is geared to that end. If public service could be made profitable, things would change. But it's not. And in that light, yes, Roy, we don't count. It's not right. But it is reality. They don't care. They don't have to. |
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