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![]() "Radio Ronn" lq6dpvk02-at-sneakemail.com wrote in message . .. "Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... "Radio Ronn" lq6dpvk02-at-sneakemail.com wrote in message . .. No, HD offers better fidelity capability than analog. (The radio is a seperate story.) What does "fidelity capability" mean? For one thing, it means stereo. That's not clear, but I'm assuming you mean better stereo rather than stereo capability. AM HD is stereo. AM had stereo first, way back in the past. It was so good, the FCC approved first one, then FOUR different methods for stereo modulation. Holy cats! The FCC actually thought there might be enough consumer demand to support four different AM stereo plans. The broadcasters and manufacturers all jumped in, as well. Everyone loves stereo, right? Problem was, people didn't like stereo enough to buy another radio. And it's not as if the radios were real expensive. They wouldn't buy four AM stereo standards. They wouldn't buy even one. Actually, people didn't care much about FM stereo, either. FM stereo didn't reach mass market appeal until it was almost a give-away with the radio. There might be a lesson there for HD radio. Give it away and maybe people will listen. But I really doubt ibiquity will give up licensing fees on their patents and copyrights. The people who could have expected most NPR stations to end up on FM were at the FCC. But the people who have made it sucessful were listeners on their radios. True. And there are also AM NPR stations who have shared in NPR's success. AM stations with NPR programming are marginally sucessful, if at all. Yet the AM NPR-istas trudge on, day in, day out, relentlessly, against all hope. At least, if the NPR AM operations fold, they are perfectly qualified to become IBOC shills! And I know our local NPR station was broadcasting mostly mono into the 90s. I believe it was NPR network policy to broadcast with the stereo pilot off unless the program was in stereo. I know some did that in the 70's...I have nvever heard of a station doing so after that. Around 1990 or so, I heard a "World of Radio" episode in which Glenn Hauser complimented the FM NPR stations which turned off the carrier for mono programming, and he complained about the majority of stations which needlessly left it on all the time. Glenn Hauser, another one living in the past. I can't think of one NPR station that shut off it's stereo pilot for mono/talk programs Ah, living in the past. I can imagine in the future in which the endless topic of discussion will be the "if only"s. If only the people stuck with a mass media fractionalized into 100 pieces, rather than go with individualized media. If only the advertisers didn't wise up to the fact that the vast majority of mass media spending misses the target. If only the magic modulation had come 10 years earlier, it would have kept that internet thing from breaking up the party. Lucky for Glenn, if he ever does start living in the past, he can look back at a lifetime as an accomplished DXer and radio broadcaster. Frank Dresser |
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