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On Fri, 13 Jan 2012 07:47:24 -0800, SMS
wrote: Content is one component. With HD Radio you can deliver more content. It's a mistake to not look at the big picture though. Audio quality matters, and _every_ study has shown that digital radio's audio quality is perceived as much higher than analog radio. Cost matters too. If content were all that mattered then everyone would be on satellite radio, which has relatively poor audio quality but an enormous selection of content at a relatively high price. Yet satellite radio can barely add enough new subscribers to make up for churn. If cost didn't matter then everyone would have an unlimited data plan on a smart phone and would buy all all the music they wanted. Coverage also matters. Streaming is fine if you have an unlimited data plan, but not on long trips outside wireless coverage areas. Methinks content is everything with one big catch. Polluted content is a big problem. Having the correct content will attract listeners. Interleaving the content with advertising, irritating announcers, and worthless PSA's, will drive them away. I've noticed that I tend to always change stations in the middle of commercials and announcements and rarely in the middle of a song or tune. I'm sure there's a study somewhere on WHEN listeners change stations, but I can't find it. Another problem is convenience. I've only played with HD Radio in the stores and in a friends vehicle. I forgot the exact ordeal process required but one thing stood out. It was not possible to tune or scan across the band, catching all the regular FM and HD stations in sequence. You had to tune to the regular FM channel, and then switch to HD1 or HD2. As long as HD1 and HD2 are the poor step child of the regular FM station on the dial, people are not going to listen. Incidentally, it was really irritating to listen to HD1 while moving. Every time the error rate climbed to an unacceptable level, it would switch to the regular FM audio. No provisions for locking it on HD1 or switching to dead air. I forgot the maker and model, but I can ask the owner if necessary. I will admit that when the signal was strong enough, HD1 sounded quite good. Convenience is also a problem with the lack of genre selection. On many computerized (PC based) radios, you don't just have a few presets. You have the stations programmed into memory by the type of music or talk they offer. I vaguely recall it can be rather fine grain to include genre changes by the hour. For example, I've been listening to KUFX lately. Repetitive "Classic rock" during the day, with sports in the evenings. Ideally, you should be able to punch a "60's rock" button and limit the selections to only those stations doing classical. The radio and the station support RBDS, the PTY (program type) data that allegedly accompanies the music or talk should contain the necessary genre info. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Data_System As for streaming, that's what I'm doing after my Subaru stock CD player died (low output in the laser head) and my favorite classical FM station changed format. I preload about 8 hours of music, audio books, and TED talks onto a cheap MP3 player, which is hot-wired into the car radio. The only reason I bother to listen to FM is when I forget to preload the MP3 player or charge the player battery. I could also rip streaming content from the internet, but haven't bothered as it ties up my computers for too long a time. HD Radio has been around long enough to make a determination if it's going to live or die. I suspect it will die because there's no compelling reason for Joe Sixpack to buy or install one. That's because the content of HD1 and HD2 often is quite similar to the regular FM channel. To the buyer, it's more of the same thing. Were HD1 and HD2 to offer commercial free or subscription based commercial free service, there might be an incentive, but those have been proscribed by economic necessity and FCC rules. Installing an HD Radio is also not a trivial exercise. There are few plug in converters and those tend to be tied to specific high end radios. At this time, installing and HD Radio consists of ripping out the existing radio, and installing an upgraded radio. That's neither cheap nor easy. Lacking a compelling reason to do this, Joe Sixpack will probably install whatever the dealer has in stock. I checked Best Buy in Capitola. One radio on the shelf has HD and nobody in the store seemed to know anything about it. I asked a few questions and got some bad guesses. As long as that situation persists, the retrofit market is a lost cause. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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