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#1
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Workplace radio listening is going online very fast, say Arbitron and
Edison. The portion who listen most often via a regular radio has declined from 88% to 80% "among college graduates, 30% say they listen most often to radio stations over the Internet." Hammer of Doom, if you didn't see it coming: "After all, on the Internet, the competition is not just the other stations in town. The possibilities are essentially infinite." Ipods sales are crazy. And now the swing from Am/Fm to the internet is noticeable. And hd sales are where? ... nowhere The latest Internet & Multimedia study, conducted among people who are employed fulltime or parttime and who listen at work, shows a clear up-and-down trend. Arbitron says “the portion of people who listen most often to radio stations through a computer over the Internet has grown from 12% to 20% in one year’s time.” Want to bet what’s happening to that old GE/Motorola portable with the antenna taped to the wall near the plants? “The portion who listen most often via a regular radio has declined from 88% to 80%.” That’s a real swing in just 12 months. And Arbitron says when you control for education, “among college graduates, 30% say they listen most often to radio stations over the Internet.” That’s contrasted to a figure of 12% for non-college grads. Edison’s Larry Rosin says “the findings suggest that broadcasters need to think about the quality of their streams, and promote the ability to listen to radio online.” And here’s the Hammer of Doom, if you didn’t see it coming: “After all, on the Internet, the competition is not just the other stations in town. The possibilities are essentially infinite.” More (including some colorful pie charts) at www.Arbitron.com and www.EdisonResearch.com |
#2
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On May 6, 9:21�am, Rfburns wrote:
Imagine that. �Struble, do you get it now? �Ibiquity is history. IF Congressman Dingell gets his way and opens up Satrad receivers for possible inclusion of HD Radio, by other manufacturers, that greed- monger Struble may make some head-way. But, who in Hell would pay the iBiquity licensing and HD chipset fees - would have to be iBiquity, and they wouldn't be able to afford it. So far, Dingell is not calling for a mandate for Satrad to include HD, as that would seem anti- competitive. Again, hopefully it will continue to be up to the marketplace to determine the fate of HD. The new Samsung HD chipsets have only 2 hours of battery life, compared to Satrad's Stiletto portable receiver, which has 30 hours. |
#3
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#4
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Maybe they'll leave the fate of HD to the marketplace. Much like they did
with Am stereo. If they picked one technology then we'd enjoy the benefits. I agree HD comes with a licensing hook and the consumers pays. But the trends away from radio to the Internet are scary. All of this is meaningless.. say in 5 or 10 years every car will have a cheap wireless internet connection. And cell phones will continue into the multimedia world.. It's like radio wireless.. but the devices and options are changing.. |
#5
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"Scooter" wrote in message
.. . say in 5 or 10 years every car will have a cheap wireless internet connection. And cell phones will continue into the multimedia world.. It's like radio wireless.. but the devices and options are changing.. Yep, could be. Wi-fi as the new radio. Digital, lots of choices, great sound, and better technology than trying to tack digital onto existing AM/FM. Analog TV broadcasting is going the way of the dinosaur - can analog radio broadcasting be far behind? |
#6
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In article ,
"Scooter" wrote: Workplace radio listening is going online very fast, say Arbitron and Edison. SNIP Sounds like pure marketing bunk to me. Every place I have worked has rules against on line listening. Companies don't want their bandwidth wasted on non-work related uses. You can certainly do it until you get fired. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#7
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Bob Campbell wrote:
"Scooter" wrote in message .. . say in 5 or 10 years every car will have a cheap wireless internet connection. And cell phones will continue into the multimedia world.. It's like radio wireless.. but the devices and options are changing.. Yep, could be. Wi-fi as the new radio. Digital, lots of choices, great sound, and better technology than trying to tack digital onto existing AM/FM. Analog TV broadcasting is going the way of the dinosaur - can analog radio broadcasting be far behind? As soon as they make a $5 digital radio that'll run for a week on a single 9 Volt battery. |
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