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On Mar 8, 8:53�pm, "Scooter" wrote:
Dear, Clear Channel, Cox Radio, Citadel, Emmis and want to be's. It's a matter of time before the FCC and our bumbling congress forces all stations to turn off their analog frequencies and go 100% digital. Or maybe radio is a dying industry. By 2020 radio as we know it will be irrelevant and replaced by other technologies Like cassette, 8 track tape 45's and dial-up have become. �FM jukeboxes cannot compete with the technologies we currently have never mind the future gadgets. Once cheap wireless internet become available everywhere radio is done. Once cheap wireless internet finds cars.. it's not good for radio. �Radio should bet on content not towers or frequencies. The time for HD was 10 years ago and where the F.....K were you? HD feels like Am stereo.. it sounded great. �But with two competing flawed technologies nobody cared enough to go out and buy receivers. Static and Am stereo.. what was radio thinking? �Hear the same thing on HD that you can hear on an analog radio that I already own? mmmm I'm not sure what are you guys are really thinking? �I'll give you a hint.. It's not working.. And I'm not even an over paid "con"sultant.. Thanks to your leadership and greed. Total radio listening is trending down slowly. Radio ad revenues are flat and declining. And because you've fired everybody. radio employment has declined sharply. The current crop of management "your flunkies" are struggling to make the Internet a profitable and viable solution to the problems you've created. But they simply don't have a clue. Oh well you might as well fire them too. I'll give you a another clue.. Advertisers want accountability. Hype, and an intangible radio ad schedule won't due, thanks to the internet and Googles point and click.. I'm witting in Mr. Google for president! Radio must go back to it's roots.. Serve it's communities and bring personalities back to radio. Hello Mcfly...What's missing is creativity, personality heart and sole. Thanks to your leadership radio isn't grooming it's future stars, if anything it's doing the exact opposite and killings it's future. The bottom line is important, but when the bottom line is more important than the art you end up killing the very things that made radio great!.. Hey it's ok... it's before your time. so you're forgiven.. Before you guys ran evil empires, and were children....Wait were you children? I'll save that for another time. Could you even imagine an ipod, computer or internet? I couldn't.. Yet, today children by the age of five, "radio's future" are already tapping on the key board. And by the age of 8, they're downloading music from the web to their ipod. Music lovers want to hear what they want, when they want it.. And some day we'll be downloading music from a wireless internet connection right to our automobiles.. I personally can't wait.. To the great one, Clear Channel radio really, really, sucks.. It's so bad. I'd dump Clear Channel to any sucker who can still pass a credit check And for the CC Clones. Cox, Emmis, Citadel and want to be's. Radio really sucks. Its time to sell radio while they still make suckers. It's over boys..and time to pack the golden parachutes. Screw the employees...Oh I'm sorry.. I forgot you already did. Hey have you thought of running a mortgage company? I hear you can screw customers, kill an industry..and get huge bonuses..I think all of you are qualified and pefect for the job.. It's great work if you can find it.. �"IT IS WHAT IT IS" "Digital Audio Broadcasting Systems and Their Impact on the Terrestrial Radio Broadcast Service" 15. We will not establish a deadline for radio stations to convert to digital broadcasting. Stations may decide if, and when, they will provide digital service to the public. Several reasons support this decision. First, unlike television licensees, radio stations are under no statutory mandate to convert to a digital format. Second, a hard deadline is unnecessary given that DAB uses an in-band technology that does not require the allocation of additional spectrum. Thus, the spectrum reclamation needs that exist for DTV do not exist here. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record that marketplace forces cannot propel the DAB conversion forward, and effective markets tend to provide better solutions than regulatory schemes. 16. iBiquity argues that in the early stages of the transition, the Commission should favor and protect existing analog signals. It states that this could be accomplished by limiting the power level and bandwidth occupancy of the digital carriers in the hybrid mode. At some point in the future, when the Commission determines there is sufficient market penetration of digital receivers, iBiquity asserts that the public interest will be best served by reversing this presumption to favor digital operations. At that time, broadcasters will no longer need to protect analog operations by limiting the digital signal and stations should have the option to implement all- digital broadcasts. We decline to adopt iBiquity's presumption policy because it is too early in the DAB conversion process for us to consider such a mechanism. We find that such a policy, if adopted now, may have unknown and unintended consequences for a new technology that has yet to be accepted by the public or widely adopted by the broadcast industry. http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-IMPA...-15/i15922.htm Keep dreaming - all digital will never happen. |
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