Some new information on old subjects
The Ford Motor company announced late last month that they will be the first major auto manufacturer to offer HD Radios in the 2008 models of Ford, Lincoln and Mercury vehicles. This should be a real shot in the arm for the advancement of HD radio. While there are more than 1500 AM and FM radio stations in the United States broadcasting HD Radio, the number of radios able to receive the signals remains very small. HD Radio, unlike satellite radio (Sirius® and XM Radio® ), is broadcast from towers and serves much smaller local coverage areas. The difference from standard AM/FM broadcasts comes in the clarity of the sound and the capacity to have more than one program simulcast over the same channel. For example, WGUC 90.9 is a classical music station. If you have a HD Radio you can get both classical programming and a jazz service with the flip of a switch.
In August I mentioned that before February 2009 you would be able to buy DTV adapters for your analog TV sets making them able to receive digital programming after the analog transmissions cease. The federal government has authorized the first company to manufacture and sell these adapters. Digital Stream Technology got approval last month. The adapters will retail at about $70 each. Plans call for the federal government to provide each US household up to 2 - $40 coupons good toward the purchase of the adapters. Look for them in stores in mid 2008.
Last May I wrote about the money you can save installing compact fluorescent light bulbs in your home as replacements for the energy hogging incandescent bulbs. Duke Energy sent coupons to customers making the purchase of the new bulbs a real bargain. Not only will you save on the purchase of the new lights but the dollar savings over the year can be as much as 75%. Even without the coupons, switching out the old incandescents will save you money. The only places you may wish to use traditional bulbs are in areas that get high traffic with lights being turned on and off often. Rooms like bathrooms or hallways with the constant on and off cycles will reduce the life of compact fluorescent bulbs.
Are you planning to buy a new HD television? According to a recent survey of about 3500 Road Runner™ subscribers in the Cincinnati area by Time Warner Cable, about ½ of respondents said they either already had an HD set or planned to buy one shortly. With the prices dropping and more programming available in HD, look for the sales of HD sets to really take off during the holidays and peak right before the Super Bowl.
Labels: DTV converters, Duke Energy, Energy Conservation, Ford, HD Radio
2 Comments:
Hey Jack, I'm back again to set things straight:
"The Ford Motor company announced late last month that they will be the first major auto manufacturer to offer HD Radios in the 2008 models of Ford, Lincoln and Mercury vehicles. This should be a real shot in the arm for the advancement of HD radio."
but,
"Radio: Internet Radio or HD Radio. You choose!"
"Here’s the choice - supplementary channels of varied audio quality from the same radio chains that deliver today’s unimaginative terrestrial radio formats or worldwide radio of every imaginable format and style where the passion is in the performance?... And, most of all, who’ll apologize for the time and money spent, the years the radio industry bought into it, and the deceitfulness suffered because of Ibiquity and the HD Radio Alliance's misguidance."
http://gormanmediablog.blogspot.com/2007/10/blog-post.html
Ford is only offering HD Radio a a secon-class, dealer-installed, point-of-sale $350 option. This is only happening because Ford owns Visteon (which makes HD radios) and is an investor in iBiquity.
"While there are more than 1500 AM and FM radio stations in the United States broadcasting HD Radio"
but,
"Have 200 HD Radio stations gone missing?"
"The HD Radio camp is advertising that there are currently over 1,500 radio stations now broadcasting in HD (from its website, to press releases as well as in various other promotions)... but yet only 1,300 have filed with the FCC."
http://www.orbitcast.com/archives/have-200-hd-radio-stations-gone-missing.html
"With the prices dropping and more programming available in HD, look for the sales of HD sets to really take off during the holidays and peak right before the Super Bowl."
but,
“Is HD Radio Toast?”
“There are serious issues of coverage. Early adopters who bought HD radios report serious drop-outs, poor coverage, and interference. The engineers of Ibiquity may argue otherwise and defend the system, but the industry has a serious PR problem with the very people we need to get the word out on HD… In New York City, the #1 market in the country, there are 25 stations broadcasting 42 HD channels. You’ll find CHR, AC, Classic Rock, Hip-Hop, News, Talk, and Sports. In other words, everything you can find on the regular FM dial… The word has already gotten out about HD Radio. People who have already bought an HD Radio are telling others of their experience (mostly bad) and no amount of marketing will reverse this.”
http://www.fmqb.com/article.asp?id=487772
After two years, consumer interest in HD Radio remains flat:
http://hdradiofarce.blogspot.com/2007/10/webstats-show-that-interest-in-hd-radio_29.html
Oh my!
HD or Hybrid Digital as it is properly known is the biggest lead balloon this country has seen in some time. Anyone who buys one of these radios whether it be in a car or for their home is wasting their money. AM IBOC (HD) jams adjacent channels especially at night for hundreds sometimes thousands of miles with an obnoxious hiss, and FM IBOC severely limits the range of the radio, making them virtually useless. Could this be the reason they have sold so poorly despite the massive infusions of cash the IBOC Alliance has spent trying to prop up this miserably failing poor technology? Could public apathy really be the public shunning of a product which they simply don't need nor want in this day and age of many choices in the marketplace? Or could it be the public wisely choosing to avoid a problem plagued product that shows absolutely no promise at all? My bet is that it is a combination of both and no matter how much money the IBOC Alliance pumps in to this mess trying to prop it up, it will fail, actually it already has. Time to wait for government bail out for an industry that has screwed itself since deregulation by buying up all the available stations that the law would allow (way too may) and putting the same bland, boring krap on each of their stations such that if you do a scan of radio at night, especially AM all you will find are 3 or 4 different formats. This is the real reason for the decline of listeners: ubiquitous boring, bland sameness of content, you can put lipstick on this pig, but it still won't sell. AMEN to iBlock and it can't happen soon enough.
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