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Who Needs Radio?

DragonMagic writes "MSNBC asks what many /.ers have been asking: Who needs the radio anymore? Rather, it goes on to really ask, who needs the RIAA anymore? With online music distribution sources, television, and the internet itself, how much longer will it be before the radio, and the RIAA, will be an obsolete means to promote artists?"

8 of 649 comments (clear)

  1. What? by marshac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do you assume that only music is played over the radio? I listen to NPR for hours every day on my daily drive to/from work.

    1. Re:What? by contrabassoon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Indeed. As a radio producer, I feel the real "art" in radio is well beyond just spinning tunes. KPFA, NPR BBC PRI and many other entities are actively using radio as a communications medium, rather than just a corporate jukebox. There are great shows like "this american life" which are compelling and creative. I am hopeful that more and more of this type of radio production will help keep the medium current in the years to come.

      Radio has been around for 100 years. It's pretty amazing that TV, the internet, etc. haven't killed it. It's still enjoyed by hundreds of millions of people here in the US every day.

    2. Re:What? by slasher999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How soon we forget. Anyone remember how useless the Internet was on 11 September 2001? Internet communication still uses shared bandwidth and is typically a one to one communication. Each user opens a connection to a web server over a relatively small pipe and requests data. With radio the data is always there - just turn on the receiver. No bandwidth constraints, no waiting for requests to be processed, no /. effect, and most of the time it's backhoe-proof. Can't say that for most websites or the Internet infrastructure in general.

  2. Erm... a lot of people by gardyloo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anyone who doesn't have fast internet access or a television (or who doesn't want to pay for cable television).
    Anyone who likes to camp and take a $5 transistor radio along, rather than lug a satellite uplink system for online-access.
    Anyone who drives, and likes to have music or blather going while doing it (driving, that is).

    In short, a LOT of people.

  3. Streaming audio in my car by Damiano · · Score: 5, Funny

    The problem is that the 25 mile long ethernet cable running to my car gets tangled too easy.

  4. NPR, blackouts, conservative shills by spoonyfork · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Hey, I'm one of the millions that listen to NPR during the day, mostly to and from work.

    In case you weren't affected by the GREAT FEARSOME BLACKOUT OF 2003 , those of us who were crowded around radios to get news.

    Don't forget the 20 million so-called "dittoheads" that hang on Rush's every word every day. Republican shill talk radio has never been so popular (depending on where you read your stats).

    There's big money in radio and the guy who owns it is raking it in.

    --
    Speak truth to power.
  5. talk on the radio by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    (I hope this post goes through. I've gotten that damn 500 internal server error something like 30 times on this one post.)

    For sure. News stations that feature only news all the time are a godsend when commuting, and important in emergencies as well.

    Remember The Blackout? I was at work patching the office for the Blaster worm when the lights went out. If it wasn't for radio and other wireless communication, we would have had no idea wtf was going on. Thankfully radio stations with reserve power managed to transmit so everyone could get into the car or use battery powered tranceivers to get the news updates.

    I used to drive to and from Toronto all the time across a strech of the 401 and if it wasn't for 680 news I would have gotten into a lot of traffic jams.

    Thus radio is still needed because it is an important way of disseminating information quickly, especially when only battery or small generator power is available.

  6. During the most recent great blackout. . . by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (yes, I'm old enough to remember more than one) everything failed. My internet connection went down, my TV went black, my electric lights went out ( my oil lamps chugged along like always).

    My portable radio worked like a charm and the emergency generators the radio stations employ kept them on the air.

    Promoting RIAA "stars" is hardly the only use for radio. In fact, small radio stations are still the most used medium for promoting obscure music unaligned with the RIAA, why do you think they oppose the proliferation of small neighborhood radio stations?

    Radio is one of the true modern marvels, its usefulness is far from past.

    KFG