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#1
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I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it
appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! |
#2
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On Dec 27, 7:20*pm, Mike wrote:
I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. |
#3
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On Dec 27, 11:10�pm, " wrote:
On Dec 27, 7:20�pm, Mike wrote: I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. "Editorial on the recent approval of HD Radio (IBOC) in the USA" "The reason the big boys in the big markets are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash as it wipes out distant signals getting into their market. There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to listen to their local station. Kind of like legal jamming. Considering that, then even if the public does not buy the radios, keeping the IBOC signal might be worth their while." http://www.am-dx.com/amiboc.htm Yup! With HD Radio receiver sales still in the toilet, there is no ROI for HD Radio, but the empty digital saddlebags continue to jam, which was IBOC's design from the beginning. |
#4
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On Dec 28, 6:54*am, PocketRadio wrote:
On Dec 27, 11:10 pm, " wrote: On Dec 27, 7:20 pm, Mike wrote: I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. "Editorial on the recent approval of HD Radio (IBOC) in the USA" - "The reason the big boys in the big markets - are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash - as it wipes out distant signals getting into their - market. PocketRadio - Oh did that Light Bulb just go 'ON'. Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Radio Market and Noises-Out the Distant Radio Stations. - There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash - wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to - listen to their local station. PocketRadio - Dang that Light Bulb just went 'ON' again. Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Market and Noises Out the Distant Radio Stations. - Kind of like legal jamming. Considering that, then - even if the public does not buy the radios, keeping - the IBOC signal might be worth their while." All Radio Advertising is 'local' as with Politics their may be National and Regional Buys -but- The Target is the "Local" Radio Listener. CCRadios may be a National Advertiser on C2C AM -but- It is a "Local" Advertiser on each of the 500+ 'Local' Radio Stations which rebroadcast the ADZ. - http://www.am-dx.com/amiboc.htm - - Yup! With HD Radio receiver sales still in the - toilet, there is no ROI for HD Radio, but the - empty digital saddlebags continue to jam, - which was IBOC's design from the beginning. PocketRadio - That's Three Light Bulb in a Day : You are Doing Good and Catching On but, But. BUT ! All this only really applies to AM/MW and the Real Intent of IBOC "HD-Radio" is FM Radio Stations and HD-2 Secondary Broadcasting Channels and Additional Income Streams from the One Radio Station License. Plus remember with rare exceptions there is 'No' DX in the FM Radio Band like there is almost every Night in the AM/MW Radio Band : So FM Radio always has be a Local Only Media Marketing System. FM IBOC is just another level of insurance that it remains that way. Like It Or Not IBOC : It's All About 'Local' Radio Marketing System and DXing Be Damned ! ~ RHF |
#5
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On Dec 28, 12:07*pm, RHF wrote:
On Dec 28, 6:54*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Dec 27, 11:10 pm, " wrote: On Dec 27, 7:20 pm, Mike wrote: I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. "Editorial on the recent approval of HD Radio (IBOC) in the USA" - "The reason the big boys in the big markets - are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash - as it wipes out distant signals getting into their - market. PocketRadio - Oh did that Light Bulb just go 'ON'. Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Radio Market and Noises-Out the Distant Radio Stations. - There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash - wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to - listen to their local station. PocketRadio - Dang that Light Bulb just went 'ON' again. *Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Market and Noises Out the Distant Radio Stations. - Kind of like legal jamming. Considering that, then - even if the public does not buy the radios, keeping - the IBOC signal might be worth their while." All Radio Advertising is 'local' as with Politics their may be National and Regional Buys -but- The Target is the "Local" Radio Listener. CCRadios may be a National Advertiser on C2C AM -but- It is a "Local" Advertiser on each of the 500+ 'Local' Radio Stations which rebroadcast the ADZ. -http://www.am-dx.com/amiboc.htm - - Yup! With HD Radio receiver sales still in the - toilet, there is no ROI for HD Radio, but the - empty digital saddlebags continue to jam, - which was IBOC's design from the beginning. PocketRadio - That's Three Light Bulb in a Day : You are Doing Good and Catching On but, But. BUT ! All this only really applies to AM/MW and the Real Intent of IBOC "HD-Radio" is FM Radio Stations and HD-2 Secondary Broadcasting Channels and Additional Income Streams from the One Radio Station License. Plus remember with rare exceptions there is 'No' DX in the FM Radio Band like there is almost every Night in the AM/MW Radio Band : So FM Radio always has be a Local Only Media Marketing System. *FM IBOC is just another level of insurance that it remains that way. Like It Or Not IBOC : It's All About 'Local' Radio Marketing System and DXing Be Damned ! ~ RHF *.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "All this only really applies to AM/MW and the Real Intent of IBOC "HD-Radio" is FM Radio Stations and HD-2 Secondary Broadcasting Channels and Additional Income Streams from the One Radio Station License." "Addressing The Long Tail: HD2s and HD3s for Fun and Profit" "Analog radio cannot effectively serve The Long Tail. Broadcasters have had huge success addressing the 80% with widely popular mass market content pushed through our loud speakers. But our economic structure won’t let us take advantage of the few consumers who like reggae or death metal or comedy or mommy talk. You simply cannot program niche formats on analog stations and make the numbers work – listenership and revenue potential are too low to cover capital and operating costs... So go ahead, grab that Long Tail. It will help your station, and help the industry." http://tinyurl.com/66jb9s "Harvard Business Review: Should You Invest in the Long Tail?" "Chris Anderson, editor of Wired magazine, argues that the sudden availability of niche offerings more closely tailored to their tastes will lure consumers away from homogenized hits. The 'tail' of the sales distribution curve, he says, will become longer, fatter, and more profitable. Elberse, a professor at Harvard Business School, set out to investigate whether Anderson's long-tail theory is actually playing out in today's markets. She focused on the music and home- video industries -- two markets that Anderson and others frequently hold up as examples of the long tail in action -- reviewing sales data from Nielsen SoundScan, Nielsen VideoScan, the online music service Rhapsody, and the Australian DVD-by-mail service Quickflix. What she found may surprise you: Blockbusters are capturing even more of the market than they used to, and consumers in the tail don't really like niche products much." http://www.citeulike.org/user/mmkurth/article/2984768 "Radio: HD Radio's holiday horror" "We already have too many radio stations on terrestrial AM and FM... If every man, woman and child in this great country of ours had complete and total access to HD Radio – it would obliterate the radio industry. You’d have listeners spread out on to too many radio stations for any one station to show effective reach and frequency. Do the math. This blue sky world for HD Radio would put all radio out of business. No one station would have enough listeners to justify advertising." http://tinyurl.com/6omhpv Oh, really? Looks like HD Radio's business-models is broken - LOL! |
#6
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On Dec 28, 12:07�pm, RHF wrote:
On Dec 28, 6:54�am, PocketRadio wrote: On Dec 27, 11:10 pm, " wrote: On Dec 27, 7:20 pm, Mike wrote: I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. "Editorial on the recent approval of HD Radio (IBOC) in the USA" - "The reason the big boys in the big markets - are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash - as it wipes out distant signals getting into their - market. PocketRadio - Oh did that Light Bulb just go 'ON'. Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Radio Market and Noises-Out the Distant Radio Stations. - There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash - wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to - listen to their local station. PocketRadio - Dang that Light Bulb just went 'ON' again. �Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Market and Noises Out the Distant Radio Stations. - Kind of like legal jamming. Considering that, then - even if the public does not buy the radios, keeping - the IBOC signal might be worth their while." All Radio Advertising is 'local' as with Politics their may be National and Regional Buys -but- The Target is the "Local" Radio Listener. CCRadios may be a National Advertiser on C2C AM -but- It is a "Local" Advertiser on each of the 500+ 'Local' Radio Stations which rebroadcast the ADZ. -http://www.am-dx.com/amiboc.htm - - Yup! With HD Radio receiver sales still in the - toilet, there is no ROI for HD Radio, but the - empty digital saddlebags continue to jam, - which was IBOC's design from the beginning. PocketRadio - That's Three Light Bulb in a Day : You are Doing Good and Catching On but, But. BUT ! All this only really applies to AM/MW and the Real Intent of IBOC "HD-Radio" is FM Radio Stations and HD-2 Secondary Broadcasting Channels and Additional Income Streams from the One Radio Station License. Plus remember with rare exceptions there is 'No' DX in the FM Radio Band like there is almost every Night in the AM/MW Radio Band : So FM Radio always has be a Local Only Media Marketing System. �FM IBOC is just another level of insurance that it remains that way. Like It Or Not IBOC : It's All About 'Local' Radio Marketing System and DXing Be Damned ! ~ RHF �.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Funny thing - Struble is Harvard-bred: "Robert J. Struble, President and CEO" "Bob earned his Bachelor's Degree in Chemical Engineering from MIT where he was elected into the Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi engineering honor societies, and an MBA from Harvard, where he graduated with high distinction as a Baker Scholar." http://tinyurl.com/5jjujj I guess, that he dosn't read the Harvard Business Review, or maybe he knows he's lying - wonder which? LOL! |
#7
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On Dec 28, 12:07*pm, RHF wrote:
On Dec 28, 6:54*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Dec 27, 11:10 pm, " wrote: On Dec 27, 7:20 pm, Mike wrote: I generally avoid the IBOC discussions in this newsgroup, but it appears that another 50 kW clear channel station has turned it off, at least at night. WHAS (840 kHz) in Louisville, KY, has had their nighttime IBOC turned off for at least the last three days. It's been a great Christmas surprise to be able to clearly receive WCCO (830- Minneapolis) and KOA (850-Denver) without having to tune out the annoying IBOC trash. Way to go! You might want to drop WCCO and KOA a note about how you like your DX back again. I always suspected IBOC was there to destroy the distant stations to protect the local market. "Editorial on the recent approval of HD Radio (IBOC) in the USA" - "The reason the big boys in the big markets - are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash - as it wipes out distant signals getting into their - market. PocketRadio - Oh did that Light Bulb just go 'ON'. Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Radio Market and Noises-Out the Distant Radio Stations. - There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash - wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to - listen to their local station. PocketRadio - Dang that Light Bulb just went 'ON' again. *Yes IBOC helps to insure a Local Market and Noises Out the Distant Radio Stations. - Kind of like legal jamming. Considering that, then - even if the public does not buy the radios, keeping - the IBOC signal might be worth their while." All Radio Advertising is 'local' as with Politics their may be National and Regional Buys -but- The Target is the "Local" Radio Listener. CCRadios may be a National Advertiser on C2C AM -but- It is a "Local" Advertiser on each of the 500+ 'Local' Radio Stations which rebroadcast the ADZ. -http://www.am-dx.com/amiboc.htm - - Yup! With HD Radio receiver sales still in the - toilet, there is no ROI for HD Radio, but the - empty digital saddlebags continue to jam, - which was IBOC's design from the beginning. PocketRadio - That's Three Light Bulb in a Day : You are Doing Good and Catching On but, But. BUT ! All this only really applies to AM/MW and the Real Intent of IBOC "HD-Radio" is FM Radio Stations and HD-2 Secondary Broadcasting Channels and Additional Income Streams from the One Radio Station License. Plus remember with rare exceptions there is 'No' DX in the FM Radio Band like there is almost every Night in the AM/MW Radio Band : So FM Radio always has be a Local Only Media Marketing System. *FM IBOC is just another level of insurance that it remains that way. Like It Or Not IBOC : It's All About 'Local' Radio Marketing System and DXing Be Damned ! ~ RHF *.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "CC Radio’s Format Lab gone?" November 2008 "So bottom line, the Format Lab is no longer available on the web and has cut some of its formats down to the most successful/desirable. The www.iHeartMusic.com website seems to only list the main audio streams of CC stations--not multicast HD formats--but does offer a few off to the side: erockster; Pride; Verizon New Music; Smooth Jazz; Real Oldies; Slow Jams and New Country. There used to be something close to 100 formats listed on the site... Really, the next round of budget cuts--out of necessity--is likely going to be HD Radio equipment and licensing renewals. It has cost broadcasters money that so far has not generated ROI. This CC Radio news above, along with the rumors that Citadel has told Engineering not to fix any broken HD transmitters on AM, may be the tip of the iceberg." http://www.rbr.com/radio/11252.html Why do you think CCU's Format Lab has been a failure - well, DAH! |
#8
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![]() "PocketRadio" wrote in message ... "The reason the big boys in the big markets are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash as it wipes out distant signals getting into their market. There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to listen to their local station. There were no first adjacent AMs making the ratings in any of the "big markets" to begin with. So what is to gain by stopping something that is not occurring? |
#9
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On Dec 28, 12:01*pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"PocketRadio" wrote in message ... "The reason the big boys in the big markets are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash as it wipes out distant signals getting into their market. There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to listen to their local station. There were no first adjacent AMs making the ratings in any of the "big markets" to begin with. So what is to gain by stopping something that is not occurring? The "book" be damned. I'm sure in rural areas, vendors get feedback about where their spots reach via sales, and sales in the store is what motivates them. So you sell farm machinery in Fresno and some customer from the boonies tells you he heard your spot on KMJ, who ya gonna believe? The "book" or your customer? IBOC is all about destroying distant radio stations. |
#10
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On Dec 28, 3:01�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"PocketRadio" wrote in message ... "The reason the big boys in the big markets are so pro-IBOC is because they like the hash as it wipes out distant signals getting into their market. There is no way to stop skip, but if the IBOC hash wipes the signal out, then the locals will have to listen to their local station. There were no first adjacent AMs making the ratings in any of the "big markets" to begin with. So what is to gain by stopping something that is not occurring? Right - WLW is adjacent to WOR and is ranked #1. |
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