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. rogers.com, "Pierre L" wrote: Somewhat the same situation is going on now in photography, with the growing popularity of digital. However, I think the same arguments against can be made as with shortwave. If it's digital, it's somewhat exclusive to those who can pay, and it requires a fairly steep investment in equipment that is rapidly superceded. It might be better in performance, but to keep up with it, the user pretty much becomes a slave to the technology. Shortwave, on the other hand, just needs a cheap receiver, and it's free for the taking. Just like an expensive digital camera gives you the picture but takes all the fun out of actually taking it, satellite radio is good, and just a button press away, but is there any fun in it? Where's the fun in listening to "radio" on the internet? Hopefully, radio will not become like TV, where the good programming is only available to those who can and are willing to pay for satellite or digital cable services. Personally, I find this trend profoundly disturbing... entertainment for the affluent. By the way, as has already happened twice to me in the five years, when the power goes out, so does all that digital junk. But radio still works as long as you have batteries on hand. Broadcast radio got me through 7 days of no electricity. There was no TV, no cells phones, no internet. It seems to me that if shortwave and ordinary broadcast radio did not exist at this time, we would have to invent it, because you can't rely on anything digital being there when you need it. During the power failure in the east last summer, I was on my way somewhere in the car. I couldn't make it because, with no traffic lights, it was gridlock everywhere. Cellphones were out too. But AM radio was on, and within less than half an hour, anyone with an AM radio could know what was going on. Was it a big terrorist attack? No, just a power failure. But I knew that because as I was sitting in the gridlock, the radio in my car worked fine. I never thought about it much before the two big power failures that affected me directly, but I like broadcast AM and shortwave just as it is. I want to wrap this up by saying that, in terms of things that you can actually listen to, I find shortwave is better now than it has ever been. I don't see a decline at all. If anything, it's the opposite. These are very good points! Because of the cheap receivability of analog shortwave, I assume it will continue to be broadcast for many years yet, though with signals increasingly aimed at just the third world. For the casual listener like me, this does not auger well. I've always liked those big broadcasters because you could easily receive them on the cheap radios and small antennas I've always had. What are some stations/shows that you listen to that make shortwave now better than it's ever been? Leonard -- "Everything that rises must converge" --Flannery O'Connor |
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