Baltimore Coffin Nails
In another great leap foward toward making WiMax Radios a realistic and sustainable product, Baltimore adds a city-covering WiMax signal with help from Sprint.
This means any radio station in Baltimore that invested money on HD Radio conversion basically pissed away dollars. Why would the public buy an HD Radio to get only a few stations who converted (and then simply repeat their existing programming) when an entire internet full of audio awaits them?
Just one more coffin nail, my friends.Labels: HD Radio, Industry, Radio, Streaming, Webcasting
Radio: Your Last(.fm) Choice for Music
Making Media Mean Something (again)
Hey Traditional Media -- remember how it felt when you made a difference? I think Traditional Media companies should be required to read (and apply!) the principles in Guy Kawasaki's Art of the Start. It would revitalize their respective mediums if they would truly embrace its principles and put them into action.
Labels: Industry
...and 100% don't give a crap.
From Inside Radio...
HD Radio awareness rises. Two-thirds of 18-64 year olds surveyed by Mark Kassof & Co. say they've heard of HD Radio. That's up from two years ago when a similar study found only 38% were aware of the product. The survey also shows consumers are also increasingly aware of HD Radio's advantages, such as higher-quality sound. On the downside, 7% think HD Radio is the same as satellite radio.
That shade of lipstick still doesn't look any better on your pig.Labels: Duh, HD Radio, Industry, Statistics
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Brraaaaainnssss...
Focusing
primarily on terrestrial radio broadcasting, ZombieRadio.com is
dedicated to pointing out the mindless and brain-dead actions of the
mainstream media industry in general.
Don't
get too comfortable satellite, television, cable, and internet -- we
all know from seeing zombie movies that the contagion spreads quickly.
"They're
coming to get you..."
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