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#1
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David Eduardo wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... But about 95% of measured listening occurs inside the 64 dbu contour, and 80% is inside the 70 dbu contour. As defined by the ability of HD to perform at all. A self fulfilling outcome. I should have been clearer... 95% of analog FM listening is inside the 64 dbu contour. How do you know this? How do you define listening? PPMs that pick up the radio behind the counter when you buy a pack of smokes? The radio in the taxi? |
#2
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![]() "dave" wrote in message m... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... But about 95% of measured listening occurs inside the 64 dbu contour, and 80% is inside the 70 dbu contour. As defined by the ability of HD to perform at all. A self fulfilling outcome. I should have been clearer... 95% of analog FM listening is inside the 64 dbu contour. How do you know this? How do you define listening? PPMs that pick up the radio behind the counter when you buy a pack of smokes? The radio in the taxi? We know it after several different parties analyzed literally millions of Arbitron diaries over a multi-year period. Diaries include the home and work ZIP code, and since 70% of listening occurs in those two locations, it's a perfect base. Diary ZIP code returns by station were laid over maps of coverage and the results tabulated... and we got the figures cited. This analysis, also done separately by Arbitron internally, resulted in both the AM and FM signal based crediting system for stations or shows available on more than one station in a general area; Arbitron's ascription process first uses best signal to make a decision, and if neither station available has a good signal, a random number generator determines who gets credit. But the base here is the same study... where is each station listenable under normal circumstances. |
#3
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On May 14, 2:15�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"dave" wrote in message m... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... But about 95% of measured listening occurs inside the 64 dbu contour, and 80% is inside the 70 dbu contour. As defined by the ability of HD to perform at all. A self fulfilling outcome. I should have been clearer... 95% of analog FM listening is inside the 64 dbu contour. How do you know this? �How do you define listening? �PPMs that pick up the radio behind the counter when you buy a pack of smokes? �The radio in the taxi? We know it after several different parties analyzed literally millions of Arbitron diaries over a multi-year period. Diaries include the home and work ZIP code, and since 70% of listening occurs in those two locations, it's a perfect base. Diary ZIP code returns by station were laid over maps of coverage and the results tabulated... and we got the figures cited. This analysis, also done separately by Arbitron internally, resulted in both the AM and FM signal based crediting system for stations or shows available on more than one station in a general area; Arbitron's ascription process first uses best signal to make a decision, and if neither station available has a good signal, a random number generator determines who gets credit. But the base here is the same study... where is each station listenable under normal circumstances.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I thought that you said it wasn't worth disussing HD Radio, except if it was against the FM-HD power increase? |
#4
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![]() "PocketRadio" wrote in message ... How do you know this? �How do you define listening? �PPMs that pick up the radio behind the counter when you buy a pack of smokes? �The radio in the taxi? We know it after several different parties analyzed literally millions of Arbitron diaries over a multi-year period. Diaries include the home and work ZIP code, and since 70% of listening occurs in those two locations, it's a perfect base. Diary ZIP code returns by station were laid over maps of coverage and the results tabulated... and we got the figures cited. This analysis, also done separately by Arbitron internally, resulted in both the AM and FM signal based crediting system for stations or shows available on more than one station in a general area; Arbitron's ascription process first uses best signal to make a decision, and if neither station available has a good signal, a random number generator determines who gets credit. But the base here is the same study... where is each station listenable under normal circumstances.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I thought that you said it wasn't worth disussing HD Radio, except if it was against the FM-HD power increase? What in the above two paragraphs has to do with HD? |
#5
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On May 14, 5:47�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"PocketRadio" wrote in message ... How do you know this? How do you define listening? PPMs that pick up the radio behind the counter when you buy a pack of smokes? The radio in the taxi? We know it after several different parties analyzed literally millions of Arbitron diaries over a multi-year period. Diaries include the home and work ZIP code, and since 70% of listening occurs in those two locations, it's a perfect base. Diary ZIP code returns by station were laid over maps of coverage and the results tabulated... and we got the figures cited. This analysis, also done separately by Arbitron internally, resulted in both the AM and FM signal based crediting system for stations or shows available on more than one station in a general area; Arbitron's ascription process first uses best signal to make a decision, and if neither station available has a good signal, a random number generator determines who gets credit.. But the base here is the same study... where is each station listenable under normal circumstances.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I thought that you said it wasn't worth disussing HD Radio, except if it was against the FM-HD power increase? What in the above two paragraphs has to do with HD?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Because you've been discussing HD in this thread. |
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