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Re: [IRCA] Poll on satellite radio acceptance.
- Subject: Re: [IRCA] Poll on satellite radio acceptance.
- From: LAWRENCE STOLER <lstoler99@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 03 Jan 2006 20:36:01 -0500
I usually just read this list and find it interesting. I don't usually
comment but I had to on this topic.
I have heard and read all the comments and arguments about satellite radio
pro and con. I have listened to XM through a friend that I visited in Texas
last year who has it in his home. I do not have XM or Sirius at this point.
I do not think most people in America are ready to pay for radio. The way
the medium is programmed these days has resulted in people using it as a
background source because it does not stand out but that's another subject.
The people that are not happy with what they hear on regular over the air
radio have so many alternatives and the number of choices increases all the
time. For example, I find so much to listen to on the internet that an
investment in satellite radio will not be worth it at this point. I would
not have time for it.
Ultimately as was said in a previous post, it is the content that will make
or brake it for Sirius and XM. It will take years before either company
breaks even and it will depend on the number of subscribers they get.
By the time the goal of these companies is achieved, so many choices will
exist that satellite radio may not get the attention it is looking for.
----- Original Message -----
From: "W. Curt Deegan" <WWWR@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Mailing list for the International Radio Club of America"
<irca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2006 7:05 PM
Subject: Re: [IRCA] Poll on satellite radio acceptance.
> Patrick,
>
> Like you, I get a bunch of music channels, but on my cable rather than
> satellite dish. Only of use in the house though. I rarely listen to it.
>
> In the past I listened to baseball I couldn't otherwise hear, via the
> Internet and still do. Every game is available for what I consider a
> small
> fee for the season, but again confined to the house -- although I guess if
> you had an elaborate mobile computing arrangement it might be possible to
> break free of the wires.
>
> If I could listen to a game on a local broadcast outlet, that would be my
> preference because it is the most convenient. Since my team is not the
> home town one though, that option is not available.
>
> What convinced me to buy XM Satellite service was the availability of
> baseball and the announcement of the portable XM receivers. I could now
> take baseball with me just as I might with an AM portable radio, with the
> advantage of not being limited as to teams that could be followed.
> Clearly
> more expensive than an AM radio, and with a subscription fee, but with a
> far broader reach in return. Now that I have it, I find other content I
> enjoy that is not otherwise available.
>
> This was the justification for me. I expect others were similarly
> motivated, though likely not a major percentage of all XM subscribers, and
> no doubt a minute percentage of baseball fans. Of no interest to me, but
> obviously considered a big draw by Sirius, Howard Stern (I think that's
> the
> guy) is another reason some people will subscribe. Mobile music without
> the need to download or record is likely a major draw.
>
> If the content on satellite is not unique enough for an individual, then
> the alternatives are always there and they'll not be satellite
> subscribers. In every instance it is the content that attracts
> subscribers, as I see it, not the sound quality or other technological
> issues -- so long as there are not major impediments in the technology.
>
> As a mobile medium, considering what people must be paying in cell phone
> charges, satellite radio is almost free, and more expansive than all the
> local AM and FM outlets combined.
>
> And as I always add, IMHO.
>
> Curt
>
>
>
> At 06:16 PM 1/3/2006, you wrote:
>>Curt,
>>
>>In my case, I have satellite radio with the Dish Network and also with
>>my Big Dish. Not in the car though. The Dish Network has Sirius's music
>>channels, plus there are zillions of music channels and radio stations
>>on satellite in different digital formats. I would not pay for it
>>separately either. If I want music, I just record it and play it in the
>>van which I do often anyway, especially when I travel.
>>
>>73,
>>
>>Patrick
>>
>>Patrick Martin
>>Seaside OR
>>KAVT Reception Manager
>>
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>
>
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