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Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
dxAce wrote: David "Yes, I pose as 'Eduardo'", wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... Actually, I have the real ratings data and you do not. Snip What you have is your overactive imagination not facts. I am going to keep you busy finding out how wrong you are. Call Owen Charlebois, at Arbitron, and ask who I am. Owen is President, Operations and Technology, for Arbitron. He was formerly head of the BBM in Canada. I've found, when talking to various folks, that when your name is mentioned, it only elicits howls of laughter. Often followed by the words: "fruit cake". |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 12:18 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... I didn't ask you about your fake imagined history that you shoe horn in at every opportunity. Call Bob DuTriel, the associate of Ron Rackley (the formost authority on directional AM antennas in the US) in Florida and ask about me. I assisted Bob while he rebuilt the WQII directional when I decided to reengineer the station. The minimum contour for FM stations to get significant listening is the 64 dbu, roughly 1.5 mv/m. For AM in metros, it is about 10 mv/m. Both AM and FM are measurements of the strength of the EMF from a transmitter at some point of distance from it dBu used to be called dBv but got confused with dBV, and was changed. It's a decibel measurement of voltage.... as my equivalency shows. dBuV is not the same thing as dBV. Care to try again. I said that, historically, the tem was changed from dBv to dBu because folks were confusing dBv and dBV... that was the origin of the "u" in dBu... which bagan with a lower case "v." While you are at it explain how 1.5 mV/m equates to either 64dBuV or 64dBV. Equivalent field strength expressed in with a different scale. Even my speedometer has two different scales, and they have equivalents all the way along, just as a metric tape and a yardstick do. My radio needs 10V/m to receive a station decently? My God no wonder you didn't believe my posts on the signal strength of local stations. I'm glad we finally figured that out. I don't care what your $5 thousand dollar radio needs. The fact is that after examining thousands and thousands of diary mentions for at home and at work by ZIP code, it has been found in several different studies that 80% of all FM listening takes place in the 70 dBu contour and 15% to 17% more takes place between the 70 and the 64 dBu contours. There is nearly no listening outside the 64 dBu contour. So, most of us actually running radio stations or involved in programming know that there is pretty much no potential for listener growth outside the 64 dBu contour as it is apparent from empirical evidence across a variety of markets and ratings periods that listeners do not listen to relatively weak signals. The same studies, on AM, showed that in and in the environs of the Top 100 metros, there is pretty much no listening outside the 10 mv/m contour. This corresponds with more anecdotal evidence that shows that below 10 mv/m the signals are so subject to man-made interference from everything from computers to traffic light controllers that they are annoying to listen to. In some metros the minimum level seems to match neatly the 15 mv/m contour or points in between, probably indicating greater noise levels in the market in general. Again, it is not about whether a station can be received. It is about whether listeners, in any significant quantity, are able to enjoyably listen to a station. And it has been proven that a pretty intense signal is necessary for a station to get audience in the rated metro areas (where about 75% of the US population lives) Your listeners are dying. You had better modernize. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 12:20 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Bart Bailey" wrote in message ... In posted on Mon, 3 Sep 2007 12:25:13 -0700, David Eduardo wrote: Begin You don't understand the purpose of ratings. It is to sell advertising by providing a metric. Radio or TV provide ratings, newspapers and magazines provide audited circulation. This data is given to advertisers to facilitate the evaluation of the media. The very data accumulated by organizations subsidized by those with a vested interest in certain results, you even admitted as much without realizing that your emperor is buck nekid. And, as I said before, the data, the methodology and the tabulations are audited each year by a team of researchers named by the Media Research Council, formed by the advertisers and agencies that use media research such as Nielsen and Arbitron. AM cannot continue as it has in the past. You had better face the facts. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 12:26 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message ps.com... On Sep 3, 10:43 pm, "Brenda Ann" wrote: They even suck when they're close to 50kw stations unless you're interested colloidal silver,"The Amazing HGH" or the advantages of investing in gold. This evening, I locked on KNX in HD around Rialto on the 210 fwy, and carried it to near Dodger Stadium without a dropout. Rialto has something like a 3 mv/m signal for kNX whose 5 mv/m ends just a tad to the east of Pomona and before Ontario. That's funny because I was unable to pick up KNX a mere three blocks away. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 12:30 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... Actually, I have the real ratings data and you do not. Snip What you have is your overactive imagination not facts. I am going to keep you busy finding out how wrong you are. Call Owen Charlebois, at Arbitron, and ask who I am. Owen is President, Operations and Technology, for Arbitron. He was formerly head of the BBM in Canada. AM radio cannot go on as it has in the past. Did you know that, when an AM station goes to FM, its number typically rise dramatically? Are you aware of this? You had better do something and fast. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 12:59 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message .. . The minimum contour for FM stations to get significant listening is the 64 dbu, roughly 1.5 mv/m. You guys throw a lot of listnership away if you're requiring 1.5mV/m.. since even cheap POS radios have FM sensitivity down in the low hundreds of microvolts, and good ones (home and car stereos) are good down to 5-15 microvolts.. you're almost a full order of magnitude higher than the average car stereo... (order of magnitude = 1x10E3) We are talking exclusively of home and workplace reception, as there is no way to track the ZIP of in-car listening. Since in home and at work account for 70% of all listening, this is more than adequate for study. Listeners, not stations, make the decision of what stations they will listen to. And listeners do not listen to signals weaker than 64 dbu in 96% to 97% of the time spent listening to radio. In other words, if the signal is not above a certain strength, listeners.... whether in Miami, LA, McAllen or New York, to name a few... do not use them. Stations are not "throwing away a lot of listenership" because listeners do not like weak signals and won't listen to them. AM radio cannot go on as it has in the past. Did you know that, when an AM station goes to FM, its number typically rise dramatically? Are you aware of this? It's time to stop twiddling your thumbs. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 1:14 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"D Peter Maus" wrote in ... I had an XM Eno (it went the way of the dumpster) and in the Hassayampa area of Prescott, there is no signal anywhere. I am pretty convinced at this point that the portables need to be near terrestrial repeaters and can't really see the satellites. Well, that simply isn't true. Now, they do often need an external antenna...the built-in can be pretty limited. But if you go into the menu you can find the antenna aiming page...it will tell you if you're listening to a repeater or a satellite. I get direct satellite reception all over the backwater and backwoods locations I travel. And my colleagues do the same. The Eno is market to be worn on a wristband, and is positioned as not needing an antena. I tried an antena that had a wire up the sleve and clipped to my helmet, and it helped only slightly... the listening was frequenly plagued by dropouts. I even get reception, indoors, on a MyFi in White Lake, Wisconsin. Where the nearest repeater is more than 5 hours away. In LA, away from mountains, it worked. Of course, this is where there are several dozen terrestrial repeaters. Sounds like either you got a bad receiver, or you got a bad external antenna. That does happen. I had a bad portable antenna out of the box. Once replaced...never a problem. I can mow the lawn listening to Fine Tuning, without so much as a glitch in the North Woods of Wisconsin. Considering the radio is sold as a wrist or belt strap one, for jogging, biking or such, not much of an exterior antenna is possible... the radio is the size of an iPod. AM radio cannot go on as it has in the past. Did you know that, when an AM station goes to FM, its number typically rise dramatically? Are you aware of this? It's time to take some kind of action. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
"D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... I had an XM Eno (it went the way of the dumpster) and in the Hassayampa area of Prescott, there is no signal anywhere. I am pretty convinced at this point that the portables need to be near terrestrial repeaters and can't really see the satellites. Well, that simply isn't true. Now, they do often need an external antenna...the built-in can be pretty limited. But if you go into the menu you can find the antenna aiming page...it will tell you if you're listening to a repeater or a satellite. I get direct satellite reception all over the backwater and backwoods locations I travel. And my colleagues do the same. The Eno is market to be worn on a wristband, and is positioned as not needing an antena. I tried an antena that had a wire up the sleve and clipped to my helmet, and it helped only slightly... the listening was frequenly plagued by dropouts. I even get reception, indoors, on a MyFi in White Lake, Wisconsin. Where the nearest repeater is more than 5 hours away. In LA, away from mountains, it worked. Of course, this is where there are several dozen terrestrial repeaters. Sounds like either you got a bad receiver, or you got a bad external antenna. That does happen. I had a bad portable antenna out of the box. Once replaced...never a problem. I can mow the lawn listening to Fine Tuning, without so much as a glitch in the North Woods of Wisconsin. Considering the radio is sold as a wrist or belt strap one, for jogging, biking or such, not much of an exterior antenna is possible... the radio is the size of an iPod. I'd verify performance with another radio. Sounds like you have a dud. XM pretty much confirmed when I cancelled. They even offered to give me a different radio.and said that "some areas are not suitable for an "ultra" portable device... they also offered a free year subscription. I got the idea this was not a new issue with them. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
"Bart Bailey" wrote in message ... In posted on Mon, 3 Sep 2007 21:24:21 -0700, David Eduardo wrote: Begin "Bart Bailey" wrote in message ... I had a DJ friend at an AOR station in Nashville back in the 70s when it tried Dolby tell me that only the deep fringe listeners could benefit from that and besides not being in the SMSA most of those hicks didn't have the gear for it. What is an SMSA? Arbitron only has TSA and MSA. Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area I think that's what he said it was referred to back in the 70s had to do with the intended area of the station's coverage Makes sense... that was the Census definition, although generally Arbitron MSA's are not exactly the same as the census MSA or CMSA of today. |
Ibiquity's "Gag Order" on engineers
On Sep 4, 9:01 am, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"D Peter Maus" wrote in ... David Eduardo wrote: "D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... I had an XM Eno (it went the way of the dumpster) and in the Hassayampa area of Prescott, there is no signal anywhere. I am pretty convinced at this point that the portables need to be near terrestrial repeaters and can't really see the satellites. Well, that simply isn't true. Now, they do often need an external antenna...the built-in can be pretty limited. But if you go into the menu you can find the antenna aiming page...it will tell you if you're listening to a repeater or a satellite. I get direct satellite reception all over the backwater and backwoods locations I travel. And my colleagues do the same. The Eno is market to be worn on a wristband, and is positioned as not needing an antena. I tried an antena that had a wire up the sleve and clipped to my helmet, and it helped only slightly... the listening was frequenly plagued by dropouts. I even get reception, indoors, on a MyFi in White Lake, Wisconsin. Where the nearest repeater is more than 5 hours away. In LA, away from mountains, it worked. Of course, this is where there are several dozen terrestrial repeaters. Sounds like either you got a bad receiver, or you got a bad external antenna. That does happen. I had a bad portable antenna out of the box. Once replaced...never a problem. I can mow the lawn listening to Fine Tuning, without so much as a glitch in the North Woods of Wisconsin. Considering the radio is sold as a wrist or belt strap one, for jogging, biking or such, not much of an exterior antenna is possible... the radio is the size of an iPod. I'd verify performance with another radio. Sounds like you have a dud. XM pretty much confirmed when I cancelled. They even offered to give me a different radio.and said that "some areas are not suitable for an "ultra" portable device... they also offered a free year subscription. I got the idea this was not a new issue with them. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You're in a pickle! |
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