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In article ,
Rfburns wrote: With this conversion consumers start to lose and big business wins. Along with “FM quality” you lose the character and versatility that comes with the elegant simplicity of AM radio that has served people so well for so long. Gone will be the days of hearing stations the next city or state over. Gone will be the day of using an inexpensive radio to get local news and weather. What you will have is a relatively expensive clunky digital radio system that is lucky to receive stations 20 miles away with any consistency that is designed to eventually squeeze out any local stations. And forget about FM quality – it’s just not there in spite of what iBiquity claims. Well, a couple of nights ago, I did a band scan to see how badly IBOC was ****ing* on the AM band. I only heard four signals, two of which were local (Seattle). Looks like the West Coast AM broadcasters realize it's a suicide pact. *(That's what it sounds like, to me). Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
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