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#1
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On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote:
On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. |
#2
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On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote:
On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. |
#3
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On Sep 28, 11:44 am, Rfburns wrote:
On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? If radio stations have just began using HD channels how would they know if anyone is listening. I'm not aware of a profit-oriented radio station that would begin broadcasting on a new channel only to abaodon it without having solid statistical evdicence to back up that decision. Same argument applies to interference. A radio station would have to gather the data on signal interference before pulling a new broadcast channel. One complaint from one dxer on rec.radio.shortwave is not going to constitute a problem. I doubt that more than a few target- market listeners will notice any impact of HD radio on their daily listening activities. Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#4
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On Sep 28, 11:57 am, Roadie wrote:
On Sep 28, 11:44 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? If radio stations have just began using HD channels how would they know if anyone is listening. I'm not aware of a profit-oriented radio station that would begin broadcasting on a new channel only to abaodon it without having solid statistical evdicence to back up that decision. Same argument applies to interference. A radio station would have to gather the data on signal interference before pulling a new broadcast channel. One complaint from one dxer on rec.radio.shortwave is not going to constitute a problem. I doubt that more than a few target- market listeners will notice any impact of HD radio on their daily listening activities. Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for setting me straight Roadie! |
#5
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On Sep 28, 12:09 pm, Rfburns wrote:
On Sep 28, 11:57 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 11:44 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? If radio stations have just began using HD channels how would they know if anyone is listening. I'm not aware of a profit-oriented radio station that would begin broadcasting on a new channel only to abaodon it without having solid statistical evdicence to back up that decision. Same argument applies to interference. A radio station would have to gather the data on signal interference before pulling a new broadcast channel. One complaint from one dxer on rec.radio.shortwave is not going to constitute a problem. I doubt that more than a few target- market listeners will notice any impact of HD radio on their daily listening activities. Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for setting me straight Roadie!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I take that to mean you will stop whining about the future of HD radio until you have something other than wishful thinking to pass on. |
#6
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On Sep 28, 12:29 pm, Roadie wrote:
On Sep 28, 12:09 pm, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 11:57 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 11:44 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? If radio stations have just began using HD channels how would they know if anyone is listening. I'm not aware of a profit-oriented radio station that would begin broadcasting on a new channel only to abaodon it without having solid statistical evdicence to back up that decision. Same argument applies to interference. A radio station would have to gather the data on signal interference before pulling a new broadcast channel. One complaint from one dxer on rec.radio.shortwave is not going to constitute a problem. I doubt that more than a few target- market listeners will notice any impact of HD radio on their daily listening activities. Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for setting me straight Roadie!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I take that to mean you will stop whining about the future of HD radio until you have something other than wishful thinking to pass on.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - **** off. |
#7
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On Sep 28, 11:57 am, Roadie wrote:
On Sep 28, 11:44 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 11:32 am, Roadie wrote: On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. Maybe cause nobody is listening? If radio stations have just began using HD channels how would they know if anyone is listening. I'm not aware of a profit-oriented radio station that would begin broadcasting on a new channel only to abaodon it without having solid statistical evdicence to back up that decision. Same argument applies to interference. A radio station would have to gather the data on signal interference before pulling a new broadcast channel. One complaint from one dxer on rec.radio.shortwave is not going to constitute a problem. I doubt that more than a few target- market listeners will notice any impact of HD radio on their daily listening activities. Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me - I'm puzzled that your puzzled at the question. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Because under 100,000 HD radios have been sold, and sales are stalled. |
#8
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![]() "Roadie" wrote in message ps.com... On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. There would be no audience statistics that showed whether night HD was good or bad, just as there are none for daytime operation. |
#9
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On Sep 28, 12:17 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Roadie" wrote in message ps.com... On Sep 28, 10:43 am, Rfburns wrote: On Sep 28, 10:31 am, Steve wrote: On Sep 28, 10:22 am, Rfburns wrote: Does anyone know of a broadcaster who's turned off their AM HD since nighttime operation started? I don't. Why do you think they'd be turning it off now when they just started night time AM HD broadcasts? Maybe cause nobody is listening? Or, possibly interference complaints? Makes sense to me. Yeah, I'm puzzled at your question as well. If radio stations have just started turning on HD why would they turn it back off again? They won't have meaningful audience statistics to base a decision on for several months. There would be no audience statistics that showed whether night HD was good or bad, just as there are none for daytime operation.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There are no listener or audience statistics for radio stations? How in the world do radio stations determine market share, sell advertising, etc., then? |
#10
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![]() "Roadie" wrote in message ups.com... There would be no audience statistics that showed whether night HD was good or bad, just as there are none for daytime operation.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There are no listener or audience statistics for radio stations? How in the world do radio stations determine market share, sell advertising, etc., then? The effect of HD can not be measured; radio ratings vary considerably due to competitive situations, the normal statistical wobble or error of a poll and there is no way to tell which reason of many is affecting ratings. Since the HD1 channel of every FM is a simulcast of the analog channel, there is no way to distinguish it from the analog product in the ratings; AM has no secondary channels so there is going to be no difference in ratings for an HD or non-HD station. So far, in this early stage, there is no measurement of HD 2 channels although in the People Meter, such channels will encode for Arbitron separately and will then be measurable. |
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