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IBOCcrock wrote:
On Sep 11, 6:31?pm, D Peter Maus wrote: wrote: On Sep 11, 5:07 am, Steve wrote: DXers may be one thin slice of the population, but the option to DX is one that many people value, whether they (currently) DX very often or not. Again, what we value as a small group just doesn't matter to the masses. The naivete of this statement This decision wasn't made by the masses. It was made by broadcasters. Broadcasters seeking to control content local market citizens have access to--one of two Holy Grails of broadcasting since the invention of the medium. (The other is subscription radio--watch your etherspace for this development.) If this decision was actually made by the masses, it may be a different story. And it may be less caustic going down. But it wasn't. Make no mistake, this decision was made by broadcasters, seeking to limit choices. What you fail to realize, here, too, is that there is another interference problem with HD....when a station out of your market interferes with your LOCAL station. That's not a DX situation...and it's happening now, today, this minute. I'm experiencing it personally. And it's been reported in the trades from DC to LA. It's been in editorial columns in local papers. It's a real issue. And imagine the results at night. Then there is the issue of shortfalls in the HD pattern in the local market. Reports of 60% coverage and less have been coming in for a while, now. Leaving non HD reception areas subject to the same noise, interference, and unpleasant artifacts, as well as poorer audio. The facts, as they are coming in, appear that HD, especially on AM, is not living up to the promise, and will be the final nail in the coffin of MW broadcasting. Allowing the spectrum to finally be closed, auctioned off, and content moved to FM where it has a chance of commercial viability. But this is not about what the masses want. Of even care about. If it were, there would be no end of commercially available HD receivers and they would be flying off shelves by the tens of millions. The masses simply do not care. And as the months drag on, they appear to care even less. One thing I've been saying since the HD radio noise began, is that for HD to take off with the public, there would have to be an FCC mandate that HD be included in all receivers, or that a cutoff date be made for analog radio. The same way as television. September 14th, there will be something equally as effective, as AM HD begins to reach into the hours of greatest propagation. The only way to filter out the crap that's skipping into the local market, will be through a digital receiver. We should know within 30 days, if the increased trash on the bands will have a measureable effect on the public's listening, HD adoption, or both. But the only ones who appear to care about HD radio, at least as of today, are the broadcasters, and the purveyors/licensees of the hardware and firmware that make HD (more or less) happen. Big (Corporate) Brother making decisions for the mass. And look at all those defending his actions. Orwell has to be laughing his dry, wrinkly ass off. "September 14th, there will be something equally as effective, as AM HD begins to reach into the hours of greatest propagation. The only way to filter out the crap that's skipping into the local market, will be through a digital receiver. We should know within 30 days, if the increased trash on the bands will have a measureable effect on the public's listening, HD adoption, or both." No doubt, consumers will continure to shun HD Rsdio - they will have no clue, nor care about what is happening. That remains to be seen, truthfully, but I"m inclined to agree with you. |
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