Wed Jun 17, 2009 1:15PM EDT
See Comments (9)
Now that the switch to digital TV has come and gone, the world is turning its eyes to another broadcast medium making the great leap from analog to digital. Obviously, that medium is FM radio, the last real analog holdout in an increasingly digital world.
Although Great Britain won't be completely converted to digital television until 2012, it's already leading the charge in getting analog radio shut down, with a goal (set by the country's communications minister) of moving FM radio services to digital by 2015.
Right now it's just a proposal, but one that's likely to gain traction. The proposal would give stations and consumers two years' advance warning and wouldn't kick in until half of radio listening had already made the switch organically. That's projected to happen by 2013. (Right now digital radio accounts for about 20 percent of listening.)
The next challenge is building out the digital broadcasting network: FM radio is ubiquitous in the UK, but digital radio is not. Until broadcasting capability is constructed that can reach 90 percent of the nation, the government has mandated that the switchover process cannot legally begin.
But the true hurdle, as the Telegraph story linked above notes, is getting automobiles switched over to the new format. Unlike digital television, you can't just plug a new converter box into an outlet and be done with the job. A huge amount of radio listening -- 35 percent on average -- is done in the car, and the only way to upgrade to digital is to install a new radio... or get a new car with one. The former option isn't all that cost-prohibitive, but for many drivers, the prospect isn't so compelling that they will want to go through the hassle of installing a new radio just to listen to a drive-time radio talk show, especially when CDs and iPods are within arm's reach.
As for America, the issue isn't so urgent. Here, no date has been set for converting to digital radio and one may never be. In 2007, the FCC declined to set a mandatory switchover timeline, and so far has said it won't set a compulsory conversion date like it did for television.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I refuse to pay for digital radio. When they have a universally available digital radio format in the US that is free of charge to use, then I will switch.
You claim 20% of radio listeners are digital. You cannot count XM/Sirius in that percentage. You can only include an over the air listener in this figure (HD Radio). I highly doubt that that percentage is above 5%. Your percentage needs to include free radio only. Pay radio is a luxury. Using my correct percentages, we are realistically looking at 50% digital to 50% analog around 2030. Yup, 21 years away. Look at all the clock radios, car radios, boom boxes, etc that are not HD radio. I don't see an alarm clock radio with an HD radio from Wal-mart around the $10 price for a few years.
highvoltage23 - 20% in the UK, not the US.
HD radio sucks bad! It's over compressed and doesn't compare to FM.
Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Posted by cokroach on Wed Jun 17, 2009 3:00PM EDT Report Abuse
Get Sirius, AM/FM sucks.