Slashdot Mirror


Internet Killed the Satellite Radio Star

theodp writes "As Sirius XM faces bankruptcy, Slate's Farhad Manjoo reports that the company has bigger problems than just the end of cheap credit. While it has what seems like a pretty great service — the world's best radio programming for just a small monthly fee — Sirius XM has been eclipsed by something far cheaper and more convenient: the Internet. Load up Pandora or the Public Radio Tuner on your iPhone, and you've got access to a wider stream of music than you'll ever get through satellite. So forget the satellites, the special radios, and the huge customer acquisition costs, advises Manjoo, and instead focus on getting Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB on every Internet-connected device on the market at very low prices."

368 comments

  1. So? by zoomshorts · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yawn, who would have guessed?

    1. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yawn, who would have guessed?

      Someone who fails to realize that there is no effective internet penetration into what is satellite radio's major market: automobile listening.

      How many cars have internet service?

      So tell us, how could internet competition kill satellite radio?

    2. Re:So? by LBt1st · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Mod parent up. This is exactly why Satellite will continue to have a market. Thousands of truckers and commuters rely on Satellite for their source of entertainment and news.
      I'm really not sure why /. keeps posting these doomsday stories about Sirius/XM. Is Clearchannel submitting these or what?

    3. Re:So? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 0

      Uh...mine? At least when my phone is in the car.

      I plug my phone in through the auxiliary jack and I have music and the added benefit of a speakerphone when somebody calls me.

    4. Re:So? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Thousands of truckers and commuters rely on Satellite for their source of entertainment and news.

      The truckers, I can see. Sirius/XM's coverage is much better than, say, AT&T or Verizon's.

      The commuter? Not so much. I know that I can listen to music via an iPhone or a T-Mobile G1 on my 30 mile drive to work with no problems. If I'm paying $30/month for a data plan, why pay an extra $10/month for Sirius/XM?

      About the only advantage satellite has over the Internet is coverage.

    5. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all commuters have iPhones or any smartphones at all. Many are still quite content with ones that can just make calls and text.

    6. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to be kidding right? That is the type of thinking that is responsible for the downfall of Satellite radio. I drive long distances every week, in the tune of 5 hours each way twice a week. Why would I pay for satellite when I can just play internet radio in my Treo, hook it up to my car stereo and listen to anything I want. Sure I get a drop now and then, but it doesn't cost me anything. I am already paying for the connection use it or not.

    7. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah man, if there were only some way to get an internet connection without wires...

    8. Re:So? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Not all commuters have iPhones or any smartphones at all. Many are still quite content with ones that can just make calls and text.

      You're 100% correct. And I'm sure that will stay the same for the next 100 years.

      Set the time machine ahead, say, 3 or 4 years:

      "What? Verizon wants to give me a free Motorola FAZR which will play music via the Internet if I sign up for a two year plan? No thank you! I want a phone that just makes calls and lets me send text messages!"

      Yeah. Sure.

    9. Re:So? by camperslo · · Score: 1

      Someone who fails to realize that there is no effective internet penetration into what is satellite radio's major market: automobile listening.

      Even without a live internet connection, devices holding music largely purchased or obtained over the net certainly cut into what would have been a much bigger market for satellite radio otherwise.

      The XM satellite radio service was officially launched on September 25, 2001
      The iPod launched October 23, 2001

      Certainly the business and technical planning for satellite radio predated the iPod.

      Certainly many of the music-listening people who might have gone to satellite as an alternative to the small playlists, excessive advertising, poor audio quality, or limited coverage area of conventional radio have found the iPod attractive. And more recently some interested in other types of programs have found podcasts a way to carry along content on the the road and elsewhere when away from home/office net connectivity.

      Of course in this era of heightened debt-awareness, many simply see subscription services as costs to avoid.
      Some of the same people who avoid the radio because of what Clear Channel and others have done to it avoid satellite radio on general principle since Clear Channel has a stake in that.

      With reallocation of tv spectrum, services providing net access in the car might be more likely too...

    10. Re:So? by duckworth · · Score: 1

      My car has an aux input and I simply plug my iphone into it. I have recently canceled my Sirius subscription because of this. Not to mention the fact that they recently, as a result of the merger got rid of some of my favorite channels that were not mainstream enough. I would say that it is starting to penetrate.

    11. Re:So? by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      What they should have said is MP3 killed Internet Radio. And regular radio is next. Their worst nightmare is people's ability to play only music they like, with no commercials, in their home, car, or anywhere else.

    12. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Obtain *BSD is dying article.
      2. s/*BSD/Sirius\/XM/g;
      3. s/linux/internet/gi;
      4. ...?
      5. Profit!

    13. Re:So? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      some of us like radio in our car for news, talk shows, live performances. Radio hasn't been threatened by broadcast television, cable television, nor internet.

    14. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and lexus (or whomever) put it in my car and it is better than radio or messing with Cd's

    15. Re:So? by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      You don't carry your phone with you in your car? Even the relatively low bandwidth UMTS can handle an audio stream, not to mention HSDPA (which is pretty ubiquitous around here at least) or the coming fourth generation network.

    16. Re:So? by NateTech · · Score: 1

      Not to mention commercial broadcast is still alive and kicking, and as interconnected to both nationally syndicated content and local content, all in the same spectrum. The onset of Sirius/XM helped them figure out how to drastically cut costs (fat) and also to figure out time to work out their advertising contracts so they could also stream to the Net... so now they have "continuity" both in having a mix of local/national content, but also in that you can transition from a traditional AM/FM receiver to say, and iPhone with only a little synchronization/buffering change-over time... get out of the car, stream it from the phone... go in the house, turn back on the receiver in there, or keep listening on the phone. Same content, local hosts and personalities involved in the local community. Whether music stations that are involved in supporting local artists, or talk radio with local discussion -- they figured out how they'll make their "comeback" against Satellite-based services, which no one needs unless they're WAY out in the boonies. Now they start converting to digital, and use sub-carriers for more "focused" content that not all listeners can hear at first... they're golden until broadband is truly "everywhere" via cellular. In fact, they have the infrastructure to use their sub-carrier digital stuff as the wide-area TRANSPORT mechanism for the cellular carriers for things like streaming content where everyone's viewing/listening to the same streams...

      --
      +++OK ATH
    17. Re:So? by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      How many cars have internet service?

      Tomorrow: Every single one of them.

      So tell us, how could internet competition kill satellite radio?

      Cell phones with unlimited data plans are available, soon they'll be dirt cheap.

      --
      I lost my sig.
    18. Re:So? by jseale · · Score: 1

      Because they spend too much time reading the Wall Street Journal and watching CNBC. Just a thought.

    19. Re:So? by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention use in rural areas.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    20. Re:So? by terryducks · · Score: 1

      Don't forget businesses who don't want their bandwidth sucked up by such activities. No, someone does pay for bandwidth, so it isn't "free".

    21. Re:So? by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

      I only use XM in the car, even though I have a Zune. Why?? For one, I don't have to deal with playlists or podcasts, I just hit the button for the 18 stations I have preset, and listen to comedy or talk radio or news or PBS or any of the many music types. It's worth the $20/month to have two XM receivers for my wife and I. And I can take one between my car and my motorcycle with ease, it uses the AUX on my car radio, and I use helmet headphones on the bike.

      Internet radio in my car and motorcycle would suck, I live in Phoenix, and once you get outside of town off the freeway, phone service disappears. I have Internet radio on my phone, and it is always dropping out. My wife was so happy to get GPS navigation on her phone, until we went to Globe, AZ on a photo shoot. And neither her phone or GoogleMaps on my phone would work anymore. We had phone service, but I guess their cell network hasn't been updated to do data.

      So there is a market for car satellite radio. Whether or not it's enough to keep them in business, I don't know. Just like there's a market for stand-alone GPS,even when all the phone's are getting it.

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    22. Re:So? by vertinox · · Score: 1

      How many cars have internet service?

      I listen to internet radio on the bus to work. Does that count?

      As long as you have 3g coverage, unlimited data plan, and a phone that allows 3rd party apps then you have internet radio anywhere you go.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    23. Re:So? by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Internet + decently-sized iPod = Internet Radio in car

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    24. Re:So? by Glyphstream · · Score: 1

      Mine has cell signal. I plug my phone into my FM transmitter, set the station, fire up Pandora and I'm good to go. It works fairly well as long as I have at least 4 bars on EDGE, and I haven't been to too many places where I get less than that.

      --
      Sig unrelated.
  2. Good Riddance by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Informative

    It was centralized anyway. However, what we need is a mesh network, because otherwise we will lose net neutrality and then you'll be back to having to listen to clearchannel because no other kind of internet radio will work on your mobile internet connection any more. WE MUST DECENTRALIZE.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:Good Riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, but I'd say, use that satellite bandwidth for true data multicasting. It makes sense even for on-demand stuff: multicast once to decentral caches, so the on-demand bandwidth is only needed for a few local hops.
      Then terrestrial and aerial bandwidth would be freed for real communication instead of being abused for 1:n feeds as it is now.

    2. Re:Good Riddance by the_one(2) · · Score: 1

      What you need is to regulate away the monopoly on broadband so there can be competition. Nobody could violate net neutrality with decent competition.

  3. flycast.fm replaced it for me. by Vermifax · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can run flycast.fm on my office pc instead of my xm radio and they have also released a blackberry and iphone client.

    The blackberry client works well so long as I'm not moving. If I am signal fluctuates and the music drops out.

    --

    Vermifax

    Logout
    1. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by plague3106 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, doesn't sound like a great solution then if you can't really use it while you're driving.

      Also, I can't run flycast or anything like that on my office pc.. those things are not allowed. I can aim a sat. antenna out the window though. Of course my main reason to keep sat. is not really the music; it's the other programming.

      Sirius music channels always sucked.. and now XMers are suffering through that. I don't listen to the music as much... even in the few cases where I like the play list better. The problem is the Sirius DJs, that don't understand their stupid babble was the second most annoying thing about FM radio. The XM DJs were less chatty, and a few were actually good. But now Liquid Metal has an annoying bitch DJ that can't shut her mouth.. and she knows nothing about metal... because she's also on two other channels at other times of the day. Sad really.

    2. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, doesn't sound like a great solution then if you can't really use it while you're driving.

      Also, I can't run flycast or anything like that on my office pc.. those things are not allowed. I can aim a sat. antenna out the window though. Of course my main reason to keep sat. is not really the music; it's the other programming.

      Sirius music channels always sucked.. and now XMers are suffering through that. I don't listen to the music as much... even in the few cases where I like the play list better. The problem is the Sirius DJs, that don't understand their stupid babble was the second most annoying thing about FM radio. The XM DJs were less chatty, and a few were actually good. But now Liquid Metal has an annoying bitch DJ that can't shut her mouth.. and she knows nothing about metal... because she's also on two other channels at other times of the day. Sad really.

      I used XM/Sirius for about a year and realized the playlist is pretty shallow. I was also not impressed with the digitization/compression artifacts that are always present. However, streaming Pandora or whatever through my iPhone isn't a solution either. It works well if you're on 3G, but where I live 3G coverage is pretty hit or miss. Additionally, running streaming music apps quickly drains the batteries.

    3. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by dlZ · · Score: 4, Informative

      I got rid of my Sirius a few months ago due to the channel changes from the XM merger, actually. I loved the Sirius metal station. When they merged, they started playing more music from the XM metal station, and it just wasn't as good. The Sirius station played a lot more black and death metal, and a lot less mainstream. There was also an excellent punk station, and (even before the merger) they turned it into some 24/7 AC/DC station. It never came back. I did enjoy Howard Stern, but losing the two music stations I listened to the most was enough to cancel. I'm back to listening to CDs in the car again.

      --
      rm -rf ./evidence @ punkcomp
    4. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should find a new job or career. Seriously, the idea that companies should control every installed application is so 1990's and impossible with the advent of web applications.

    5. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really wish DJs would learn that listeners really only want to hear them say one thing. "That song was X by Y", and that's the one thing they go out of their way to never say. That's the great thing about Pandora, you never have to listen to the DJ and you can always look to see what the name of the current song is.

    6. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by terryducks · · Score: 1

      and when you contacted the company - What did they say ?

      What ? you didn't.

      you got what you asked for then.

      Jeez, people - call, write or email - complain.

    7. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by dino2gnt · · Score: 1

      After giving Liquid Metal a chance (being a die-hard Hard Attack listener) it really hasn't changed that much. Hard Attack never played as much death and black metal as I'd have liked, but it's still miles away better than anything else out there or your metal listening needs.

      --
      Future events such as these may affect you in the future!
    8. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by lavalamp70 · · Score: 1

      I don't work in a cube, so the PC option is out. And I'm not going to waste money on a laptop, just so it can sit out and get dusty from my work environment. I've been a SIRIUS subscriber for three years and loved their programming. With the merge, my blues channel is all jacked up, and Boneyard is not as good as Buzzsaw was. At least they haven't messed with Classic Vinyl - yet. I have not noticed yakking too much in between songs either. To each their own though....

    9. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the plug, I just tried flycast and it appears to work pretty well, even while driving.

      I never "got" the need for satellite radio... Why go through all the trouble of setting up a realtime broadcast system and pump through pre-recorded stuff? It wasn't even killed by the iPod... at least on an MP3 player you can create your own mix and shuffle to your favorite songs. What satellite radio competes with was the tape cassette... I used to record radio shows on tape so I could listen to something on long driving trips. Even now I "time-shift" internet radio to CD-Rs to take with me in rental cars.

      I have been in one or two rental cars with satellite radio. It was a little bit neat until we drove into the mountains. We actually gave up on tuning into the signals in the foothills.

      If there was 1 thing that really broke any allure of satellite radio for me... it was tuning into Prairie Home Companion and finding the sat feed to be in low quality monoaural while the FM broadcast of the show sounded much better in stereo. Silly people who think NPR is "talk" radio...

      Anyway, I'm really looking forward to HD Radio taking off, but apparently because of some stupid patent issue, the tuners are very expensive, and you simply cannot buy a portable unit or even a USB tuner for your PC/laptop. Also the low-quality "talk" radio quality thing probably affects HD Radio as well.

    10. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by GrayCalx · · Score: 1

      You're exactly right with your "to each their own" statement. I had both services while they were separate. And they were different enough that most people would prefer one over the other.

      Sirius seemed to group their music more by style... eg, you had an "alternative" channel that also played some hip-hop and metal, because that's what skaters listened to.

      XM was always "too cool for the room" music. Lots of b-sides and lesser known music. I liked using satellite to turn into something i've heard before, so this didn't match, but exactly like you said, everyone has their own taste.

      An interesting tidbit that I had heard was that XM started by really focusing on the tech. Their radios were smaller, and cooler, at the start because that was their focus. Sirius on the other hand focused on DJs. They hired DJs to "manage" stations, programming the channel with what their experience told them was the best fit. Both interesting ideas but its just such a niche market now with the widespread use of mp3 players.

      I hope they find a way to make it work. The best radio show hosts are all owned by SiriusXM right now (Ron & Fez, Stern, Opie & Anthony) and I hope they find a way to use them productively.

    11. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by dlZ · · Score: 1

      I just felt like Liquid played a lot more things like Metallica, and a lot more older metal like Iron Maiden. I don't remember ever hearing any hardcore after they merged, either. Hard Attack didn't play a ton of hardcore, but at least they played some. Still, either is better than the metal you'll hear on terrestrial radio, that's for sure. (most of the time, one local station has a metal show on every Sat. midnight to 6am that plays great music, uncensored.)

      --
      rm -rf ./evidence @ punkcomp
    12. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I thought XMLM played more stuff that wasn't as mainstream. I don't think i've ever heard slayer as much as it's on now.

      Ultimately though my problem isn't with some of the changes in music.. I can take a bad song. A super crappy dj is intolerable.

    13. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      You're a dolt. We're a manufacturing company, and have no use for "web applications." One of the main problems now is that things AREN'T locked down and a huge amount of time is spent by our ONE IT guy rebuilding computers for people like you that think they know more than they really do. Also, bandwidth costs money, and I understand my company would rather use their T1 for business purposes instead of my entertainment purposes.

    14. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I have complained. Several times. They never get back to me.

    15. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by linzeal · · Score: 1

      If your manufacturing company hasn't at least experimented with some web applications, I am sorry. It makes things a lot easier in regards to manufacturing engineering design when you do not have to worry about a moving or proprietary platform, or worse proprietary hardware interfaces and magic black boxes. A web application can run on the intranet you know, and web programmers are far cheaper and plentiful than C and Java folk. Easier to outsource, in other words. I hope to god you are not a programmer.

      Um, who said anything about entertainment?

      You have one IT guy, lol. If you are not going to invest in infrastructure be prepared to deal with a "standard" substandard interface for years to come.

      I have not had a virus on any computer I have maintained let alone needed to nuke and reinstall everything except due to botched drivers or Windows upgrades.

      I still think you should find a new job but from the sounds of it you are where you belong. Enjoy the locked computers I hope they are spill proof for your drool, you dolt.

    16. Re:flycast.fm replaced it for me. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      If your manufacturing company hasn't at least experimented with some web applications, I am sorry. It makes things a lot easier in regards to manufacturing engineering design when you do not have to worry about a moving or proprietary platform, or worse proprietary hardware interfaces and magic black boxes.

      We have our own in house engineering staff, both software and hardware. They have no problems developing their designs and getting them to our plant using Windows.

      A web application can run on the intranet you know, and web programmers are far cheaper and plentiful than C and Java folk. Easier to outsource, in other words. I hope to god you are not a programmer.

      I know.. and I would not waste time building a web application for internal use. They suck. Horribly. I don't know why you think they are cheaper. Having to deal with the hacks for lack of built in state management and not being able to control which page the user can navigate to (without extra code) make web programming much more difficult than typical "fat" clients, oh and lets not forget the extraordinarily primitive controls you can use on a page. Yes, I am a programmer... and I'm not going to choose my technology stack based on the latest buzz words. Web is fine if you don't have control of your client workstations; we do, so rich client it is. Since I'm using ClickOnce deployment... updating my application for my users is just as easy as deploying a website.

      My contrast to this is my client work I do for my personal business as a consultant, where they WANT web applications. Its much more difficult... and not for my lack of experience. Prior to this gig, I spent eight years doing web development. So I know the ropes.

      Um, who said anything about entertainment?

      The discussion is about internet radio vs. satellite radio. Yes, that's entertainment. Please try to keep up.

      You have one IT guy, lol. If you are not going to invest in infrastructure be prepared to deal with a "standard" substandard interface for years to come.

      Just how many IT people would you need for 75 users? Also, its not MY company.. I don't get to decide when we need to hire or not. The owners do.. and yes they are idiots.

      I have not had a virus on any computer I have maintained let alone needed to nuke and reinstall everything except due to botched drivers or Windows upgrades.

      Yes, you give your users full reign and they are NEVER get a virus. Sure. As I said, if things WERE more locked down, there'd be less firefighting by our IT guy. But the owners know best.

      I still think you should find a new job but from the sounds of it you are where you belong. Enjoy the locked computers I hope they are spill proof for your drool, you dolt.

      Calling me a dolt when you clearly lack comprehension is pretty funny. My employer isn't perfect, but I'm paid very well and given the freedom to do things properly, and I get to make the technology decisions. My system runs the entire company, and has streamlined their operation. But ya, I must be a dolt.

      There's a reason sys admins are paid less than us developers.. sorry you weren't smart enough to hack it in CS.

  4. too BIG to die by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bankrupcy? Yawn. If the company collapses and goes out of business it will mean a short outage. There is just too much hardware out there for it to die... SOMEONE will pick up the pieces at fire sale prices and yeah, quality will probably go down, but satellite radio is installed in too many cars to completely die out. Howard Stern will go away, but hundreds of channels of ad-free music will survive. (although I've noticed the DJs still talk over the beginning of the songs...just like real "free" AM/FM radio)

    1. Re:too BIG to die by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      I think the DJs on satellite are the single most annoying thing about the service. I use it mainly for the info channels like CNBC, CNN, and sports, but I do occasionally tune into music. If I wanted people yapping inanely over songs, I'd listen to land based music. That's an easy head count reduction that would actually improve the service.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    2. Re:too BIG to die by AvitarX · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I think they have to talk over the start.

      It makes it a public performance, and they don't need to pay the performer.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  5. Bollocks by drsquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What percentage of radio listeners even have an iPhone, or any portable device capable of radio reception at non-extortionate rates? Too small to even matter.

    Satellite radio has its own problems but the iPhone isn't one of them.

    1. Re:Bollocks by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think what is happening is just as iPod became the unofficial name of a MP3 Payer, Kleanex became the unofficial name of tissues. Coke down south has became the unofficial name for Carbonated Soft Drinks. the iPhone is getting its reputation as a smart phone or an internet aware phone. Which is a growing market. I think the point still hold true. How many people with satellite radio or how many people with iPhones, from my experience I have seen more iPhones (even more smart phones which can do the same job) then satellite radios. A smart phone you can carry anywhere with you Satellite radio don't have much of a market as a portable unit. And normally just hooked into cars. So the iPhone (as the term of a powerful cellphone) could unseat Satellite radio

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:Bollocks by nurb432 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Every mp3 player i have ( except my ipods ) has a FM receiver.

      While true, its not getting 'internet radio' it does get radio reception at "a non-extortionate rate", when i want it. ( which isn't often )

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    3. Re:Bollocks by geoskd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Satellite radio has its own problems but the iPhone isn't one of them.

      I don't think you fully understand the importance of the iPhone. The point isn't that everyone owns an iPhone, and they will simply start using it to get internet radio, the point is that the next generation of "normal people" phones (the generic ones that people with little money get) will be of the iPhone caliber, because no one wants the crappy half jobs anymore. More importantly, these devices are rapidly going to become the main connection method to the internet for most entertainment needs. Who wants to have to lug around a specialized piece of hardware for every single application. What people really want (and apple discovered they will pay a very high price for) are single devices that do it all. If I have to carry a cell phone anyway, it is damn convenient when it is also a music device that I can integrate into whatever stereo I happen to be near. Its also pretty nice when it is a PDA I can use to keep notes and reminders, and oh yeah, I really like the fact that it is also a GPS unit, and I can use it to look up information when i am no where near a "computer". The fact is that the future of stand-alone dedicated hardware is going away, and except for a few niches (dedicated game consoles, and PCs to name a few, although I'm not sure about the latter), all of that functionality will be absorbed by your cell phone. Since I got an iPhone, I use my PC about half as much as I used to, and I haven't listened to any kind of broadcast music at all. I get it all through my phone, and that phenomenon is going to get more common, not less.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    4. Re:Bollocks by spottedkangaroo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Satellite radio has its own problems but the iPhone isn't one of them.

      Yet. But I'm reading about wireless that can function in the 100Mb range, broadcasting to a car moving 100mph. It's safe to say that in 10 years it'll be unthinkable to try a car trip without your 100Mb internets to keep the kids busy.

      --
      Imagine if you weren't allowed to use roads because a bus company complained about your driving 3 times. --skunkpussy
    5. Re:Bollocks by camperdave · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Every mp3 player i have ( except my ipods ) has a FM receiver.

      So? We're talking about XM radio, which is a satellite based system. If you're doing a long drive, you could listen to an XM radio station for the entire trip. That means you could listen to the entire broadcast of a radio play, or of a talk show, without driving out of range. It also means that you have the full suite of stations available to you when you're up at the cottage, where there is no internet, and the only FM station you get plays rap "music".

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    6. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Satellite radio has its own problems but the iPhone isn't one of them.

      I don't think you fully understand the importance of the iPhone. The point isn't that everyone owns an iPhone, and they will simply start using it to get internet radio, the point is that the next generation of "normal people" phones (the generic ones that people with little money get) will be of the iPhone caliber ...

      I don't think you understand TIME.

      The 'next generation of "normal people" phones' has had exactly ZERO impact on satellite radio and its CURRENT financial issues.

      Because the real universe operates on a CAUSAL basis.

    7. Re:Bollocks by tickbox · · Score: 4, Funny

      Does the car fly and then fold up into a briefcase after you're done driving?

    8. Re:Bollocks by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      perhaps the problem is: and instead focus on getting Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB

      How many people listen to the BBC World Service on little FM or AM radios already? How many of them want to hear Howard Stern?

      The problem is almost certainly the content, and a little down to the cost.

    9. Re:Bollocks by poetmatt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Easy solution for sirius:

      10$ a month for a satellite connection fast enough for internet radio.

      Done. They'd have more subscribers than they'd know what to do with, and plenty of people would buy. Of course the initial investment would suck.

    10. Re:Bollocks by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Thats why my mp3 player has stuff on it that i like. i dont NEED radio, especially if the want me to pay more.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    11. Re:Bollocks by SkyDude · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What percentage of radio listeners even have an iPhone, or any portable device capable of radio reception at non-extortionate rates? Too small to even matter.

      Satellite radio has its own problems but the iPhone isn't one of them.

      Let me add - am I the only one who thinks that listening to music on a smartphone is ludicrous? I have a nice multi-speaker setup in my vehicle, and the sound quality is excellent. I've seen and heard the iPhone and it doesn't even come remotely close to the sound quality of even a cheap in-car system. Wear the earbuds you say? Can't do that when you're driving in many states.

      I've waited for digital music reproduction all my life (I'm over 50) and it's here. The last thing I'd want to listen to it on is the 21st century equivalent of the 6 transistor radio.

      --
      == First cross river, then insult alligator.
    12. Re:Bollocks by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, even if cell phone data plans were free, the fact is that cellular coverage in the US just isn't good enough for reliable audio streaming at decent qualities.

      I've done the "stream to a phone" thing in my car once or twice, and it just wasn't worth the hassle. There are places on the highway where the stream drops every time I pass them, requiring manual intervention to restart with most players. Also, operating in an EDGE area requires a low-quality low-bitrate stream.

      I have a mobile device capable of streaming, but when in the car, it is the XM receiver I always listen to.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    13. Re:Bollocks by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually it's both - Sirius XM cited rising talent costs as the prime reason for their bankruptcy.

      I'm not sure how bankruptcy law and contract law interoperate, but they could save a LOT of money by ditching Stern. I have nothing against Stern, but if you look at how much his contract was for, you wonder, "how the hell is that investment going to pay for itself?". Yeah Stern will bring in some subscribers, but $500m in profit worth? Not likely.

      Looks like fortunately for Sirius XM, their 5-year contract with Stern is up soon.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    14. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like bundle devices, except when they include my phone. Maybe I am crazy, but I am Ok with carrying around two tiny devices in my pockets. The reason being, I never want turn off my music for fear I might have to make a phone call later. Maybe every time you are near a power source, you charge back up, but I am just not as conscious of my portable devices remaining power. So my ideal situation would be a portable mini computer, and a small cell phone. Or a smart phone device that partitioned the power supply so I never had to worry about my phone dieing because of the other junk I was doing. Maybe I am just paranoid of being lost without a phone, a lot of this comes from not owning my own car! (This is a response to the idea that Iphones are the future, and how I don't really like them)

    15. Re:Bollocks by edmicman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Somehow they managed to do it without things like built-in DVD players and crap like that. We haven't started having kids yet, but when we do I'm tempted to NOT have all of those things. My parents had road trips when they were kids without all of this tech, and we did without as kids, too. Why should my kids get to not enjoy the boredom and conversation?

    16. Re:Bollocks by certain+death · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't know what crowd you hang out with, but when the iPhone becomes the main connection to the Internet for entertainment, it will need to have a screen the same size as my computer, at least 24". I am so fucking sick of hearing how the i(insert inane object here) is going to replace eveyone's (insert something large here) just because it is really neat! I own a T-Mobile G1, my wife owns an iPhone and I nor my wife use them as out main entertainment connection to anything. We use them for getting email when we are not at a computer and for making calls when we are not at our desk or home phone. That is all.

      --
      "My immediate reaction is "WTF? What kind of moron doesn't make things 64-bit safe to begin with?" Linus
    17. Re:Bollocks by myth24601 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Our parents didn't have those things so they had no choice.

      On the other hand, kids in cars used to not have to sit in car seats either so there were more ways to keep them occupied. I remember 3 hour trips packed in the back of the station wagon. I had about half of the back area to myself so I could play with cars, legos or whatever. Now kids are strapped down and can not move.

      --
      No matter where you go, there you are.
    18. Re:Bollocks by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      Question, if you have an iPod and can subscribe to NPR podcasts, why do you need a radio on your trip assuming that you know how to pick songs that you like onto your iPod?

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    19. Re:Bollocks by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Next generation? My phone was released in 2005 and was a cheap consumer model (N70) and is capable of receiving Internet Radio streams. The only thing preventing me from doing so is the cost of data. An Internet radio stream uses around 50MB/hour, which would quickly burn through the bandwidth allowance on my cheap pre-pay plan.

      The hardware wasn't the limiting factor, the network was. With plans offering 3-10GB/month now becoming affordable, it looks more interesting. 10GBs works out to around six hours of Internet radio per day. If you're using crappy headphones you might not notice the low quality of a 64Kb/s stream, which extends this to 12 hours per day.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    20. Re:Bollocks by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know most phones have headphone sockets that can be connected to the line on on your nice multi-speaker setup, right? The phone is the access device, not the playback device. You don't even need cables if your car and phone support the stereophonic bluetooth audio profile, just get in the car and have the sound automatically move from your headphones to the car speakers.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    21. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Are we there yet????

    22. Re:Bollocks by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      You can listen to an FM radio station too for the entire drive. You just need to listen for a national radio station and have a radio that supports automatically switching to alternative frequencies. All this meta-information is send via the RDS signal.

    23. Re:Bollocks by idiotnot · · Score: 1

      What percentage of radio listeners even have an iPhone, or any portable device capable of radio reception at non-extortionate rates? Too small to even matter.

      But everyone the author knows does, and they all listen to public radio. Everyone in the entire country is the same, right?

      (Hint: in many markets, if Arbitron published ratings for government radio, they'd be in the bottom quarter of the market for ratings. Supported by listeners like you on their 1040 forms.)

      Sirius and XM's problems have more to do with a business culture that gave us the dot com crash; I remember seeing photos of the XM studios, and seeing that the entire place was full of aerons.

      Sirius, OTOH, completely screwed the first group of shareholders, then got a big credit line enabling them to buy XM. Now they can't afford the payments on that credit line.

      End of story.

      I just wonder why XM agreed to the merger in the first place. They weren't in great shape, but they also weren't the financial sewer that Sirius is.

    24. Re:Bollocks by Helios1182 · · Score: 1

      I doubt many people are listening through the iPhone speakers. Many stereos include line-in connections or cradles for iPods/iPhones. The music then plays through the car stereo.

    25. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Who wants to have to lug around a specialized piece of hardware for every
      > single application. What people really want (and apple discovered they will
      > pay a very high price for) are single devices that do it all.

      I don't think you realize that not everyone wants what you want.

      I don't want my MP3 player to also be my phone and my GPS. By
      that, I'm not saying "I lack the desire" (which is passive),
      I'm saying "I actively want my MP3 player to NOT be my phone".

      Single points of failure are a bad idea.

    26. Re:Bollocks by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      When I first saw rumblings of this a few days ago, my first thought was that they were using it to get out of Stern's contract early.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    27. Re:Bollocks by Zerth · · Score: 1

      It's called bluetooth. My cheap car stereo has it, what kind of system did you overpay for that doesn't?

    28. Re:Bollocks by eobanb · · Score: 1

      FYI, in the US, 'public radio' is not 'government radio.' National Public Radio, American Public Media, Public Radio International, etc., are primarily funded from donations and other private sources. Some funding comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, but it's usually around 15%. The CPB is, in turn, mostly funded by the government.

      Bona fide 'government radio' from the US would be programs like Voice of America.

      --

      Take off every sig. For great justice.

    29. Re:Bollocks by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

      Same here. Data networks dont handle hand-offs as well as some people might think. I have yet to see a stream as stable as satellite radio. Or as stable as a bad wifi connection. Toss in all the wires and the lack of a remote control or big buttons and its a deal killer.

      Im really getting sick of these 'the iphone can do everything' aritcles. It cant. Satellite isnt popular because its subscribes are backwards hillbillies, its because its works right out of the box.

    30. Re:Bollocks by Malc · · Score: 1

      With one slight catch: they didn't have anything worth listening to anyway. I had a rental car with XM last year, and I spent a huge amount of time searching through all of the channels, and cursing that I hadn't been able to find the the audio cable for my MP3 player. They were broadcasting rubbish, and unfortunately the CBC were on one of their weird kicks too.

      Other countries don't have such a big problem with radio fading as you drive across country. The BBC has several country-wide radio stations, and most modern radios in the UK automatically retune to the new frequencies as reception fades. No advertising too, which is one of my major draws to the CBC in Canada (as well as fairly intelligent and well educated presenters who aren't bombarding us with moronic mindless drivel like most radio presenters).

    31. Re:Bollocks by SkyDude · · Score: 1

      You know most phones have headphone sockets that can be connected to the line on on your nice multi-speaker setup, right?

      Of course I do know that, I have one on my car system.

      I suppose one could carry a bunch of memory cards with all of the music one owns and have it all available wherever they go. But, does how does that compares to satellite service, with its dozens of formats, traffic reports, sports and other offerings?

      I had satellite radio (until XM effed me), and it made long trips a whole lot more enjoyable. My point was that the iPhone and other small devices natively suck when it comes to music reproduction - especially when that music is compressed to 128Kb. As a storage medium, they're a wonder, but they'll never be a replacement for a quality sound system or a service that offers such a wide array of choices as satellite.

      Besides, with a sound system, you can share the music instead of being an earbud zombie.

      --
      == First cross river, then insult alligator.
    32. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A little over a decade I remember upgrading the ISP modems from 56K Flex to the new 56K modem standard.
      10 years later we are far from ubiquitous Internet, let alone broadband even available everywhere. I'll be shocked if in a decade there is 100Mb available to the average US home let alone along our Interstates.

      Heck even the billions in the stimulus package for broadband has time frames up to 2012 and knowing our existing telcos they can eat that up without doing a thing.

    33. Re:Bollocks by TellarHK · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is one of the primary reasons I got XM when I did, back in 2002. I was doing a lot of long distance driving, and it was great not to have to mess with trying to find a new station every hour or so. It didn't hurt that the DJ's were talented, the playlists were deep and the quality was stellar compared to anything short of a CD at the time.

      Back then, XM really felt like an amazing thing. They were playing music, didn't have many ads, didn't really stray from the "We're here to play your music" ideals that they based the business plan around. Unfortunately, things just went (slowly) downhill from there.

      Right now, I'm on the last free month of three that they gave me when I called to cancel after the Sirius channel merge took away some of my favorite stations. I've got a Slacker G1 shipping on Wednesday, an 80 gig iPod and an iPhone now, so I have options galore that I didn't seven years ago. Three months ago, I had five XM Radio accounts for myself and family. Next week, I'm only going to have one.

      Sirius XM did exactly what people were afraid they would if they merged. Jacked prices, destroyed choice in the marketplace, and in general screwed the customer. The FCC made a huge mistake allowing this merger, and now people who used to enjoy satellite radio are paying for it.

      But I'm not nearly as bitter as I could be. Slacker and Pandora are great, the spread of DRM-free MP3's from Amazon and iTunes mean I don't have as many qualms about 'buying' music online as I once did, and one of my XM radios will easily move between my two cars with only a power brick. Sirius and XM may have been afraid that the Internet was going to pose a challenge, but by raising multi-radio rates $2 mo/radio, only three months after killing/merging a lot of people's favorite stations they're only making it worse for themselves.

    34. Re:Bollocks by idiotnot · · Score: 1

      Direct from CPB @15% yes. But the majority of NPR's funds come from member stations (affiliate fees); those stations also receive the majority of their funds from CPB.

      It's a nice shell game that hides the fact that "public" radio was be pretty much kaputt without the taxpayer. We're still probably looking at over half that's directly traceable back to government.

      Yet they run commercials, anyway.

      But I suppose it's an important function of government. It provides a niche audience programming (while completely ignoring the audience it purports to serve....drive through the 'hood in a major city and see how many radios are blaring classical music from the local government radio station), and provides employment to thousands who failed in commercial radio (the same is true for television...hello Charlie Rose).

    35. Re:Bollocks by TellarHK · · Score: 1

      So don't compress to 128k?

      I've got an 80 gig iPod that sounds just fine in my cars plugged into the line in (or through the tape deck) with 256kbit or FLAC encodes. 128kbit isn't horrible, but satellite wasn't honestly much better. I recall hearing that XM actually was using AAC for the streams, with bitrate decided on a per-channel basis.

    36. Re:Bollocks by TellarHK · · Score: 1

      Any system made before the last couple years? Most stock car stereo systems?

      Bluetooth radios are still fairly uncommon, much as line-in jacks were only a few years ago. Most people don't replace car stereos once they get over the age of 30. Of my two cars, only one has a line-in and neither has Bluetooth. Granted, I'm a big enough geek that I'm planning on going full CarPC in my Q45 sedan, but for now I'm stuck with Bose OEM.

    37. Re:Bollocks by Penguin+Follower · · Score: 1

      And where do you get a sat connection that cheap? I'm asking honestly, because I've never seen such a thing. I'm curious.

    38. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually, Howard's 5 year contract has another 2 years on it. And when you figure that more than 50% (I think the number is actually over 60%) of the Sirius listeners are their for Howard it might actually make sense to try to extend his contract. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if half of the Sirius subscribers left shortly after Howard does.

    39. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      99 problems, but an iPhone aint one.

    40. Re:Bollocks by adamjaskie · · Score: 1

      How many stations do that? And what is their coverage like where I drive? Also, my radio doesn't do RDS. I love my Sirius radio. When I got it I pretty much stopped using my iPod and CDs in my car.

      --
      /usr/games/fortune
    41. Re:Bollocks by adamjaskie · · Score: 1

      I got endless hours of amusement by reaching across the imaginary line down the middle of the seat between my sister and I, waiting until she started yelling at me, then pulling my hand back and sitting there innocently before my mom saw. Kids these days are so spoiled.

      --
      /usr/games/fortune
    42. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a clever idea, but it wouldn't have gotten me through flyover country. When people talk about only having one station with some preacher yammering and one other station where "we got both kinds, we got country and western", sometimes they aren't joking.

    43. Re:Bollocks by camperdave · · Score: 1

      10$ a month for a satellite connection fast enough for internet radio.

      10$ a day for a satellite connection fast enough for internet radio.
      There, fixed that for ya.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    44. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regardless of the funding sources/percentages for NPR, it is clearly a (left-wing) propaganda arm of the government, and since every station is a tax-deductible non-profit, every dime contributed is taxpayer-subsidized.

      Can't wait to hear the "Fairness Doctrine" proponents try to exempt their local Radio Moscow on the basis that they're non-commercial.

    45. Re:Bollocks by friedman101 · · Score: 1

      Coke down south has became the unofficial name for Carbonated Soft Drinks.

      not sure who started this rumor but as a former southerner from the heart of coke-land (atlanta) i'd like to clarify that if we want a sprite we ask for a sprite. we do, however, tend to call any vending machine that serves a liquid a coke machine.

    46. Re:Bollocks by Zerth · · Score: 1

      True, almost no-one changes stereos anymore, but he mentioned how nice his was so I figured either he swapped a new one, or paid a fair bit a while ago and might not mind keeping it up to date.

      Mine is stock and nearly 2 years old, actually, although I did upgrade to the second crappiest stereo for the USB plug. I figured that 2nd crappiest two years ago might be standard, now-a-days.

    47. Re:Bollocks by afidel · · Score: 1

      Thank you for mentioning Slacker! That's just what I was looking for, a Pandora like app with caching for the Blackberry, now I have no need for an ipod touch.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    48. Re:Bollocks by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      We haven't started having kids yet,

      ... Obviously.

      but when we do I'm tempted to NOT have all of those things.

      ... Yeah. That will last a long time, I'm sure.

      My parents had road trips when they were kids without all of this tech, and we did without as kids, too. Why should my kids get to not enjoy the boredom and conversation?

      As others have pointed out... They and we made do because we HAD to.

      After you've been on a few 8-hour drives with a 3yo, come back and let us know how that "conversation" is working out for you. :)

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    49. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Howard Stern was amusing 10 years ago, but he is way past his prime. I had a friend who signed up to listen to him, and wanted to cancel by the 2nd show. He canceled his service before the first month was up.

      If they dumped him, they would survive a little longer ... in the long run though, they won't last. Internet radio on mobile devices is going to kill them. Sure, there are places you won't be able to get it, but there aren't enough of those types of subscribers who could help them keep a float.

    50. Re:Bollocks by dr_canak · · Score: 1

      Well,

      Stern easily brought somewhere between 1,000,000+ to upwards of 6,000,000+ listeners over to Sirius depending on who you read and listen to. I think the 1,000,000 is an extremely conservative estimate, but even a million subscribers at $12.95 per month (for one radio mind you. Many folks, myself included, have multiple subscriptions) works out to over 150 million a year, which certainly covers the cost of his contract. And that's assuming only 1 million new subscribers. Sirius accumulated over 1,000,000 new subscribers from the time they announced the Stern deal to the time he went on the air (or very close to it). And this was before they were sticking free radios/subscriptions in cars. There was an article in Fortune or Forbes not long after the agreement was made public that spelled out the same kind of math.

      I'm not saying it wasn't an absurd contract or absurd amount of money. Of course it was. But Sirius was in the outhouse before they hired Stern. They were getting absolutely slaughtered by XM (some 10x the amount of subscribers as compared to Sirius). Now Sirius owns XM. Stern's listeners paid for his contract, and then some. However, it was such an absurd amount to offer that Sirius didn't quite reach the financial reward they could have had they not given Stern so much.

      Two years ago, Sirius would have just refinanced the debt and continued to build its revenue stream. However, there is no money to borrow now, and they are in a world of hurt as a result.

      jeff

    51. Re:Bollocks by nsaspook · · Score: 1
      --
      In GOD we trust, all others we monitor.
    52. Re:Bollocks by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      He's not suggesting to get a satellite connection and stream radio, he's suggesting that Sirius switches it's service to "internet provider" because they seem to have bandwidth enough to do streaming audio.

      (What he oversees, though, is that this bandwith is all downstream and the same for everyone... one way broadcast communication...With Internet one needs two-way)

    53. Re:Bollocks by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      The stations depend entirely on the country. Just like RDS technology ifself. The original radio (with also has a cassette player!) in my 15 year old car supports RDS, and all the major radio stations in my country supports it, and sends alternative frequencies on it, but then; I live in Europe. Which makes me wonder if XM solved a mainly North American problem (crappy local stations, and low adoptation of RDS).

    54. Re:Bollocks by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Well yea if you want a sprite you ask for a sprite. However say up in New York Downstate NY and eastern Upstate NY calls Carbonated Soft Drinks Soda, Western NY Calls it Pop. Being from New England/Eastern Upstate NY myself I call it Soda. So when sitting at home and have only one brand of soda in the fridge I see my wife getting herself a drink I may ask her if I could have a drink too. And she will ask what do you want Milk, Water, Juice or Soda.

      Down South except for calling it Soda or Pop they call it Coke. It may not necessarily be in the Atlanta area as there is a Coke Plant there and there are a lot of people with massive brand awareness. But in other areas where people don't care if it is Coke, Pepsi, or Royal Crown they will just say Coke,Soda or Pop or even rare Soda-Pop.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    55. Re:Bollocks by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      I'll admit, there's a spot on the highway west of me (in my case I am almost always driving east) where the XM always drops out due to a cliff above the highway to the south.

      But it only drops out for 10-20 seconds, and immediately reestablishes as soon as I get away from the cliff without user intervention.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    56. Re:Bollocks by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      There is no way in hell Stern brought that many subscribers into Sirius.

      There may have been that many new subscribers after he was brought on, but how many of those came because he was on Sirius? Probably a tiny percentage.

      I was an XM subscriber and not Sirius, so I wasn't familiar with their pricing scheme - was Howard "premium" content like O&A were on XM? In that case, how many people actually signed up for that "premium" addon?

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    57. Re:Bollocks by dr_canak · · Score: 1

      Howard was part of the sirius standard package,

      so there was no additional fee. It does appear now that he is not part of this a-la-carte packaging their doing, and if you want Howard, you have to pay for the whole package. As far as how many subscribers can be attributed to Howard, of course that's hard to say. What is true is that Sirius had some 600,000 subscribers when they signed Howard, with very negligible growth in new subscribers. Also, their deal with Howard pre-dated their deal with car manufacturers, so the rise in new subscribers after having essentially flatlined for 2 some years is basically attributed to Howard, at least for a couple years after signing that deal. The subscription count doubled, if i recall correctly from about 600,000 before they inked howard, to about 1.2 million when he actually went live. And that number doubled again a year after Stern went live. So, they essentially quadrupled their paid subscribers from the day they announced the Stern deal to approximately one year after he went on the air. Again, I understand that you can't necessarily attribute all that growth to Stern, but it's certainly more than coincidence. Finally, the estimates from '05 were that 20% of dedicated listeners would migrate to Sirius to hear Stern. Again, how many listeners he had in '04 is hard to say. But google around and you'll see estimates ranging from around 12 million to 20 million. Taking a very conservative figure of 10 million listeners, and only 20% of those listeners moving to Sirius, that's still 2 million listeners attributed to him alone.

      My conerns with the deal were (a) that Stern's fan base has essentially flattened. And whatever percentage of his followers that were going to follow him to Sirius have already done so. Therefore, Sirius/XM can't expect any more growth from him. That ship has sailed. And the second was (b) when Stern cashed in an early set of options and took close to half that contract up front, rather than wait and watch the stock rise in price. That told me right there he had perhaps less confidence in the product than he could talk about on the air.

      jeff

    58. Re:Bollocks by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, kids in cars used to not have to sit in car seats either so there were more ways to keep them occupied.

      Exactly! I used to climb up to sit between my parents, and on a few occasions I'd sit on Dad's lap and he'd let me hold the steering wheel. I'm pretty sure they'd just shoot you on sight if you let your kid pretend to drive the family minivan down the interstate today.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    59. Re:Bollocks by CPE1704TKS · · Score: 1

      If you don't know the value that Howard Stern brought to Sirius radio, then you completely don't understand the topic you're talking about and I suggest you stop talking about it. Howard Stern is the only reason why satellite radio exists at this point. Sirius was built on his back, if you look at the subscriber growth before and after he joined, it's like night and day. I'm a Sirius subscriber and the only reason why I considered moving onto there is because of Howard. It makes the 45 min commute every day much easier. Everyone I know that has Sirius did it for the same reason. Sure Sirius has good music and programming that is entertaining, but is it worth $12.95/month? No way. The only thing that is worth paying money for is Howard, and once he leaves I'll probably leave too, unless they drastically drop their price to around $5/month.

    60. Re:Bollocks by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Howard Stern was amusing 10 years ago, but he is way past his prime. I had a friend who signed up to listen to him, and wanted to cancel by the 2nd show. He canceled his service before the first month was up.

      Anecdotal bits of evidence are like opinions and assholes - everybody has one, and they all stink. There is no denying the millions of new subscribers that Sirius picked up from the day they announced his contract, through the first year or so of his show and beyond. Depending on whose figures you listen to, Sirius XM is making anywhere from $25 million to $65 million a month because they have Stern (and $13 a month of that comes from me), well worth the $500 million of his contract (which is for the whole show, production, crew, etc. by the way; it doesn't all go to him).

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    61. Re:Bollocks by afidel · · Score: 1

      According to my local stations 2007 financial report ~$4.5M of their $42M operating budget was all state and federal grants combined. So only about 10% was from governmental sources, they would be hurting without those funds but they would hardly have to turn off their transmitters tomorrow if CPB was ended.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    62. Re:Bollocks by afidel · · Score: 1

      According to my local stations 2007 financial report only ~$4.5M of their $42M annual budget came from all state and federal grants combined, so about 10%. If the CPB were to end tomorrow they would be hurting but they would hardly have to turn off their transmitters.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    63. Re:Bollocks by afidel · · Score: 1

      According to my local stations 2007 financial report only ~$4.5M of their $42M annual budget came from all state and federal grants combined, so about 10%. If the CPB were to end tomorrow they would be hurting but they would hardly have to turn off their transmitters.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    64. Re:Bollocks by adamjaskie · · Score: 1

      Crappy/nonexistant local stations, low adoption of RDS. It comes on a lot of newer foreign cars, but not all station support it, and many stations won't do handoff, if they even have more than one transmitter. Many places are only covered by a couple stations, and your choice is country or preaching. Many places have no station that comes in clearly at all. Realize that I can drive for ten hours without leaving my state, and during that time there might be times when I don't see another car or so much as a house for 30 miles. And I don't even live in one of the huge western states with regions of virtually uninhabited desert, I live in Michigan.

      --
      /usr/games/fortune
    65. Re:Bollocks by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      aww I wish I had seen this post, but you replied to the guy who replied to me.

      I never said it was 100% feasible but the concept of sirius letting people tune in to any internet radio station of their choosing and taking some kind of small cut for themselves, or just plain giving internet on the move in the car, would be a step forward for them. Not to mention it's something that's already coming anyway. There are internet radio in-dash units on the way. Why not sirius step up on that? They wouldn't even need their own content, and plus they have satellite available to maybe beam to repeaters on the terrestrial side.

      This is all speculation of course, but it seems like something that sirius would have the option of exploring more than most people.

  6. No Thanks! by SirSmiley · · Score: 1

    I cant see streaming via cell phone as practical....people have to pay for data plans, people take their phone with them when they leave the car. If i take my phone (assuming im paying lots of money for an iphone (i wouldnt i have a blackberry bold) and i have a 1 gig limit on it per month.)..i dont think ill be wasting it streaming audio....i leave the car to go shopping and my wife is in the car still, what will she listen to...no thanks, stupid idea....

    1. Re:No Thanks! by geoskd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      (assuming im paying lots of money for an iphone (i wouldnt i have a blackberry bold) and i have a 1 gig limit on it per month.)

      All nested comments aside, maybe you should consider and iPhone. I am well beyond this mythical 1GB / month limit of which you speak, and I have not had a problem with discontinuation of service... Perhaps you chose the wrong service plan?

      i leave the car to go shopping and my wife is in the car still, what will she listen to...no thanks, stupid idea.

      I'm assuming that if your wife is staying in the car, that you probably aren't going to spend an hour and a half shopping. I'm going to suggest that unless you need you phone (maybe it has the list of items you wish to get), you could probably live without your phone for the ten minutes you were inside. I would also submit the question: does you wife have a phone? if yes, then is it a smart phone as well? if no, why not? valentines day was yesterday. I got my wife an iPhone, what did you get for your wife?

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    2. Re:No Thanks! by peragrin · · Score: 1

      dumb question. you leave your wife in the car while you go shopping?

      also if you have a cap on your bandwidth then you choose the wrong plan, or your provider is a cheap prick.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    3. Re:No Thanks! by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Your wife should probably have a phone too.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    4. Re:No Thanks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got my wife an iPhone, what did you get for your wife?

      A divorce lawyer - she said it was what she always wanted...

    5. Re:No Thanks! by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      valentines day was yesterday. I got my wife an iPhone, what did you get for your wife?

      I got my wife a pre-order for a Kindle 2. I'm hoping she doesn't like it so I can take it.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    6. Re:No Thanks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All nested comments aside, maybe you should consider and iPhone. I am well beyond this mythical 1GB / month limit of which you speak, and I have not had a problem with discontinuation of service... Perhaps you chose the wrong service plan?"

      Blackberry compresses data going to the device. I believe the figure is 1 iPhone = 20 Blackberries in terms of bandwidth usage. So bump that 1 gig limit up to 20 gigs and you have figures you can compare to your iPhone.

  7. So how's this gonna work in my car? by abner23 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Only place I use satellite radio...

    1. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by reboot246 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's the only place I listen, too. I work out of my vehicle and my job covers several states. Sometimes there are no radio stations worth listening to in the small towns where I work. I like XM for the talk and news, not so much for the music. It's nice to be able to listen to Coast to Coast AM when I'm leaving home at 3 in the morning and driving 2 or 3 hours to work. Talk radio is more entertaining than music sometimes.

      Sure, if I worked in a big city I could use my laptop to listen to streaming radio online, but that's impossible when you're in the middle of nowhere.

    2. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by tkrotchko · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think a lot of people here don't quite understand that once you get out of the city, there is no 3G data plans, there is no radio to speak of, and when you can get some reception, the AM/FM dial only has local sports & information on it. And yes, there are iPods, but when you spend a lot of time in your car, you've listened to your 10G of music for the hundredth time, you'd actually like to be surprised by music you haven't heard of before.

      It's also fair to say that many people here believe that everybody is willing to pay thousands of dollars for a cell phone data plan simply because they do, but that's not my main point here... ;)

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    3. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people here don't quite understand that once you get out of the city, there is no 3G data plans, there is no radio to speak of, and when you can get some reception, the AM/FM dial only has local sports & information on it.

      You forgot one important thing that is conspicuously missing away form the cities as well... a market for expensive gadgetry.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    4. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by SpcCowboy · · Score: 1

      Pandora on my iPhone works just fine on EDGE, though a little slow to load the first song when switching stations.

      --
      -- Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new. -- Albert Einstein
    5. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pandora does not work on edge. If it did, I would never use anything else.

    6. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      You can dump streaming radio to disk and sync it with your ipod when you get home, assuming your not away from an internet connection for longer than it takes to play a few gigs of audio...

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    7. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by horatio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm with you here. The internets are pretty limited once you're out on the road. I think Pandora is great, but it doesn't stream live anyways - so no live content (news, talk, etc) there. For all intents and purposes it downloads and mp3 and plays it, downloading the next one while you're listening.

      XM gives me access to a variety of programming without having to pay $7.00/mo to multiple individual websites so I can listen to their shows on the internet - which again isn't available nearly as much outside population centers. It also gives me several news options, a variety of music, etc all without having to screw around with finding a website on my iPhone while doing 75mph down the freeway.

      I'm considering cutting the XM just because of budget stuff, but I'm actually considering cutting the CATV first, because the stuff that I watch on TV that isn't broadcast happens to be simulcast on XM. Just need to find a reliable, inexpensive way to timeshift XM.

      --
      There is very little future in being right when your boss is wrong.
    8. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by TroyM · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're right that 3G coverage and radio selection out in the middle of nowhere sucks. And there is a market for people who're willing to pay for Sirius/XM because of that.

      The problem is this market isn't big enough to pay Sirius/XM's costs. That's why they've never made a profit, and likely never will. And with the credit situation the way it is today, the life expectancy for companies that constantly lose money is not very long.

    9. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by meta-monkey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This topic comes up on /. every few weeks, and everybody says the same thing "Duh why do I want XM radio when I can stream intertubes!" Like you, I use XM radio IN MY CAR. ALL THE TIME. It's never even occurred to me to want XM radio in my office. I have my entire music library here and can easily cue up anything I want to listen to. I like XM because it goes anywhere in my car, and I don't have to plan out a playlist for every trip into the next town.

      I really don't want XM to go under. I like it too much for driving.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    10. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      I use Pandora on EDGE all the time. I only use it sitting at my desk, but it does work.

    11. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by TellarHK · · Score: 1

      Even in most cities, 3G coverage is spotty as hell. I can't drive from one end of Carson City to the other using Pandora on my iPhone, without the phone dropping into EDGE during the drive and blasting high-volume GSM noise through my speakers.

      Sirius XM is formed from two companies that both had massive overhead (literally) and poor plans to get out of it. I always felt that XM had a better chance to survive, and that Stern just cost Sirius way too much. (Besides, Opie & Anthony are actually funnier.)

    12. Re:So how's this gonna work in my car? by THOTHdha · · Score: 1

      Only place I use satellite radio...

      Slacker.com provides a "Personal Radio" service somewhat similar to satellite radio in that it can be used in your car or while moving around. The music is updated over WiFi or USB. From my experience a station can run for eight hours with very little repetition. With devices that can hold up to 40 stations there is no reason you shouldn't be able to get to someplace where it can be updated before you grow tired of the music. This might not provide a good solution for Revoot246's problem, but it seems like it would for tkrotchko and TroyM.

  8. What Farhad Manjoo misses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most important part of satellite radio is *mobile* access. Automobile. Essentially the same market that AM/FM stations have.

    Let's look at what he's saying one by one:

    1) The bulk of the article compares the iPod with Satellite Radio and says they're competing for the same market. Hmmm. Maybe so, but how many people have iPod docks in their car?

    2) The idea that satellite radio is somehow a big market when streamed over the internet. Then he compares it to the huge number of free, high-quality internet streams and declares that Satellite Radio is too expensive. It doesn't even make any sense.

    3) He chooses to dismiss the payments by satellite radio to car makers. He says if they got rid of that then they could charge less for the internet streams. Seriously man, I think he's retarded.

    Let's be real. The *primary market* for Satellite Radio is automobile access. You turn on the music and as you drive all around the country, you get the same music/talk/news whatever. And what's more, it's a great application, too. Everybody who gets satellite radio, if they enjoy it, never listens to AM/FM again in their car.

    If Satellite Radio was all set to rely on the Internet for it's delivery mechanism, then the whole reason for Satellite Radio disappears. Satellite Radio isn't about content it's about a delivery mechanism for content that doesn't require any infrastructure beyond the satellites themselves. The problem isn't that it competes with an iPod (doubtful) or that it doesn't come over the internet (goofy), its that the infrastructure set up by Sirius/XM is too costly. These guys took a bet on an adoption rate that hasn't happened.

    This article is so dumb that it reminds me of a letter to the editor (true story) about 35 years ago. We were going through an energy crisis and the local paper wrote an editorial that said we need to begin seriously moving to solar. A few days later, a woman wrote in that it seemed like a poor idea because if we used solar power, we'd simply use up the sun quicker and then it would be really dark.

    It demonstrated that the person writing the letter was clueless about what solar power was or how it even worked. Farhad Manjoo makes the same mistake. He has no idea what Satellite radio is, and why people want it. So he

    1. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The problem is that those satellites are very expensive. Another is that XM reinforces that signal using repeaters in big cities, so that is some expensive infrastructure as well. Not only that, XM was fined for using higher power repeaters than they were permitted, and not using them in the locations where they had permits to put them.

    2. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by VinylRecords · · Score: 1

      The bulk of the article compares the iPod with Satellite Radio and says they're competing for the same market. Hmmm. Maybe so, but how many people have iPod docks in their car?

      You don't need an I-Pod dock in your car. Any MP3 player and a small FM transmitter with a stereo headphone jack can play your MP3 player over the air into your car's radio. There are also devices to convert stereo headphone out from an MP3 or CD player into a cassette tape that can be played in a car's cassette player. And even then, some cars have a stereo line in, you can plug any device such as an MP3 player into the stereo jack in your car's radio. And even then, a stand alone CD or tape functions just as well as an MP3 player in the car for most people.

    3. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      I don't think he's missing the mobile point much at all. The iPhone is an iPod+phone+PDA, right? And so are a number of other smartphones. Anyway, most competitive smartphones in the U.S. have access to 3G wireless networks. That's more than fast enough to accommodate Internet radio on your device. 3G wireless works just fine in the car. And if you want to play it through your car radio, most conventional car stereos these days have an input jack for an MP3 player -- which will work fine for the iPhone and other smartphones.

    4. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by m0s3m8n · · Score: 1

      Right on man. One thing to add is the cost of some of the content that got bid up when the two companies were vying for listenership. Please excuse me, but HOWARD STEARN is not worth even an order-of-magnitude less than they are paying him. Come on, maybe even two orders.

      --
      Conservative, mod down for violating /. political norms.
    5. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most important part of satellite radio is air travel in private planes. XM provides in-flight weather radar that feeds directly into the flight GPSs. There currently is no substitute for this.

      The best solution is to ditch voice radio and have the gov acquire the system and transmit weather, traffic, etc, for free just like they do for GPS.

      Screw Stern.

    6. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 1

      Maybe so, but how many people have iPod docks in their car?

      More and more. New cars are coming with USB ports that also support plain old USB memory sticks as well as iPods. Even better, auto manufacturers are putting controls on the steering wheels.

      Satellite does offer some value but instead of a monthly payment, people can get whatever hardware and load it with their own music. And there are starting to be changes in the music industry too - DRM-free music, more competition, etc.

      I could have gotten satellite radio with my last car but decided not to and won't get it with my next. I would rather eliminate monthly payments than pick more up.

    7. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      I bought a satellite radio when after driving through Washington State and Idaho having only God Squad Radio to listen to, and those stations fading every 50 miles, and 2500 more miles of that to go... I stopped in Salt Lake City and bought Sirius. I have been very happy with it ever since. I go on long trips now and then, and even the shorter trips can span multiple cities crossing countryside. No 3G anywhere out there. Honestly, grow up and check your horizons. So what if you only know the suburbs, others out here actually go outside. 3G is not everywhere. Besides, I and I know others too, like to listen to more than just music. There are good talk radio stations on Sirius too. We aren't relegated to just Jesus Loves You Talk Back and Rush Limbaugh if driving through the right wing farm belt. We can listen to NPR OR Rush OR (choke) CNN if we want. Or comedy, or Stern, or whatever. I like music as much as then next guy, but I like to hear the news and weather too. Go for a road trip and you'll get it... eventually... if the trip is more than just to 711 for Doritos.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    8. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by psychokitten · · Score: 1

      You turn on the music and as you drive all around the country, you get the same music/talk/news whatever.

      Thanks to Clear Channel and the like - you already get this for free in your car.

    9. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      Actually, the primary reason for bankruptcy cited by Sirius XM is not satellite network maintenance costs, but talent costs such as Stern's $500m contract.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    10. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Manjoo also seems oblivious to the fact that internet broadcasters are having their own problems with the Copyright Royalties Board and SoundExchange right now. It may not be that much cheaper for (legal) internet broadcasters to stream audio by the end of the year if the spike in royalty rates (compared to whatever satellite pays now) cancels out a significant percentage of their overhead.

      Unfortunately, that's pretty typical of Manjoo's technology pieces for Slate. He's been impressively unimpressive handling their tech columns. He rarely seems to know what he's talking about at all.

    11. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by enrevanche · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is/was that they should have made making the receiver so inexpensive that it was included with most automobile receivers. They could then have given six months free with every new car.

      Additionally, they should have cooperated in receiver design so that any particular receiver could be set up to have received either XM or Sirius (or both).

      Doing these things would have made it much easier to sign up and/or remove a service when desired.

    12. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Yes, and the quality is really really bad...
      I would rather burn my songs to CD than use one of those crufty adapters... Tho it may be possible to adapt the cd changed to a line in...

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    13. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by tiny-e · · Score: 1

      This is the wireless equivalent of "Let them eat cake."

      A place where your cellphone doesn't work? Inconceivable.

    14. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? How do you get CNN, FOX and the BBC by using your iPod? It fairly clear that those who criticize satellite radio (including the original article's author) don't have a clue....

    15. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by HereIAmJH · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Any MP3 player and a small FM transmitter with a stereo headphone jack can play your MP3 player over the air into your car's radio.

      Several people have mentioned using FM transmitters, and there is a big problem with that when you are traveling. As you change regions quite often you have to change your FM transmitters channel because a frequency that it available in Tulsa might be in use in Denver.

      I used one for a while when I had XM and used it on several road trips. If you go that route, make sure it can be configured for many different frequencies and put them in the presets on your stereo. I also had a couple occasions when none of the frequencies my XM transmitter worked on were available.

      And for the reasons I no longer use XM; they raised the price after 6 months, their play lists aren't any deeper than broadcast stations, they have the same endless DJ chatter, they have commercials too, but it's for their own shows and channels, and despite all the channels available most people will only find 2 or 3 that suit their tastes. Oh, there is never any local information (traffic, weather, events, etc)

      --
      Another day, another update to a Google android app.
    16. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Rukie · · Score: 1

      I bought a cheap sirius radio about 3 years ago. After three years the unit burned out, and for no charge Sirius sent me a free radio. The problem Sirius has right now, is that they need a larger market. If it became "standard" that all cars had sirius, it would be great for them. Their monthly fee is 12.95, and I think that's cheaper than WoW. Internet Radio is NOT the market for sirius (but they do offer it). Sirius also offers business deals and campus deals. At the Rochester Institute of Technology, you can hear Sirius channels playing in the dining areas, in the gym, and in general all around campus. Since attending college I gave my parents the car unit, and picked up a second subscription and a stiletto. It can hold about 18 gig or so of music, has streaming internet access when your indoors (for music only), and streaming sattelite radio when your outdoors. So, it can compete with Slacker quite well. Many restaurants fail on the first attempt, are bought out, and become successful on the second buyout. I have a feeling the same will hold true for Sattelite radio.

      --
      Support the source, Open Source! An entire site developed with OSS
    17. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Dzimas · · Score: 1

      *Everybody who gets satellite radio, if they enjoy it, never listens to AM/FM again in their car.* Rubbish. Much as it's nice to have homogenized talk shows and music broadcasts across the continent, I still listen to terrestrial broadcasts for rush hour traffic updates, weather and local news and commentary.

    18. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I tried using one of those FM transmitter things with my iPod, and it was awful. Full of static, intermittent, and on a long car trip I'd be sure to pass some radio station transmitting on a similar frequency and it would overpower my iPod transmitter.

      I haven't seen a car with a cassette deck in about 8 years, either.

      I wish iPod docks became standard. I would love it they came out with Garmin-style turn by turn GPS navigation on the iPhone, and when I got in my car, I plugged my iPhone into the dash. The car would power/charge the iPhone, the iPhone would give me turn-by-turn directions (and have access to the addresses of my Contacts), it would hook into my car sound system to play my MP3s and also provide hands-free calling. That would rule.

      On the other hand, if enough iPhones plugged into cars with 3G internet access are on the roads, all networked together...man, that's Skynet just waiting to happen right there.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    19. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Zerth · · Score: 1

      Lately, it has been. My car came with Sirius & 6 months free. I listened for about 3, they merged with XM and replaced all the stations I listened to with stuff I didn't like.

      Then I realized that I could pop a 500 gig USB drive into my stereo and just play that, plus whatever podcasts were on my blackberry, and pretend my phone company just took 15 bucks off my data plan.

    20. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by kaizendojo · · Score: 1

      Agreed, and then some. The subject reminds me of an article I just read in Time Magazine (*PRINT EDITION*) about saving the newspaper industry.

      With business model shifting the revenue streams from ad hosters to aggregators, rising print, production and fuels costs, unless the print journalism finds a way to effectively monetize themselves, they are in dnager of disappearing. The only ones making any income of their news units these days are the networks.

      Who cares? You should.

      The idea of journalistic integrity goes out the window when the journalists are beholding (or at the mercy) of advertisers and sponsors. Having just watched "Good night and Good Luck", the black and white film of Edward R. Murrow and Senator McCarthy, I'm struck with just how "free" our press was at one time - free enough to save this country from a self appointed protector of our freedoms.
      Well, at least stave it off until Bush/Cheney.

      Without income, who will pay for foreign offices or fly a news crew to where a story is happening? Who will have the courage to buck the system and produce the next documentary that tells us what happened while "we were out"?

      Not everything, it seems, has to or even should be 'free on the internet'. Sometimes, to get a quality product, you need to pay. And sometimes, to preserve your interests in the product - think open source - you have to participate and pay the expenses.

    21. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. Maybe so, but how many people have iPod docks in their car?

      Most (all?) new cars come with radios that have an aux jack on them. If you have an older car nearly any after market radio will have an aux jack on it. For a little more money you can get radios that have ipod jacks so you can control the ipod from the radio. Of course you can always do the broadcast tuner thing (which is what a person is already using if they have satellite radio and don't have an aux jack of some sort).

      The big problem with satellite radio is that the actual base of people who see it as a need is small. The primary segment of people who want satellite are those that drive a lot AND cover a lot of ground. Everyone else can easily get by with normal radio and their ipod for music.

    22. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sirius was also fined for the same violations.

    23. Re:What Farhad Manjoo misses by LibertineR · · Score: 1

      We Blackberry Storm users already have turn by turn GPS Navigation, with access to our contacts. We also have stereo bluetooth, something else lacking in the iPhone.

  9. I'm tired of subscription-based service by .Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I had satellite radio, but ended up ditching it along with a few other things. We decided that we were being economically bled to death my numerous little services, none of which were too bad individually but collectivity they ate up our budget.

    - Sirius
    - DishNetwork
    - Land-line telephone
    - Internet service
    - MMO fees
    - Cell phone
    - GameTap
    - FilePlanet

    The list goes on. Eventually we were able to eliminate, consolidate, or reduce many of these fees. We safe a lot of money each month now. I now try and avoid anything that has a recurring monthly service, at least not unless it replaces something else. Business should realize that, in these tough economic times, people are going to take a hard look at where there money is going. Month payments don't have an end in sight, there's no payoff.

    --

    Thanks,
    Bruce
    1. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      -1 for masquerading as Bruce Perens.

    2. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      so true.
      i've found that one-time expenditures, even if a bit costly, are less painful than monthly recurring payments, even if relatively less. i really want to buy the iphone but i simply cannot justify paying 1000 bucks (INR) each month for a 1gb data cap.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    3. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by Paul+Pierce · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Same reason here for dropping XM. I've had XM for 10 years with 3 different cars. Nothing beats it, the quality is great (with a good antenna), the selections are very good. The talk shows/sports/comedy channels are a big bonus. I have my iTunes collection in the car and a 6 CD changer, but Satellite radio almost always wins out.

      It is very good for out of state and long trips, and not like other posts I've seen here I really have liked the merger. I feel that I have all the same rocking channels and more now. I also get all the sports now. It came down to another monthly payment for a luxury item. Truth is I can live without it, even if I miss it.

    4. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least in the case of Sirius there is the option of buying a lifetime subscription. I bought one for my wife when Howard started. I figure that we've broken even now but it does take some guts to plunk out a few hundred dollars up front. (And yes I can transfer the subscription to another radio in case ours dies.)

    5. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by unityofsaints · · Score: 1

      You North Americans don't know how lucky you have it.
      When I was in the U.S. on holidays I was amazed by the huge number of satellite stations the rental car had on offer. It was playoff time in the NBA and I spent many a 5+ hour car trip continuously listening to live basketball in excellent quality, no need to worry about tuning when getting out of range like with AM/FM etc.

      There's just nothing like that here in Ireland! Then again, we have close to no live basketball here at all - the t.v. official rights holder decides to show one game A WEEK. Having FTA triple headers in HD at playoff time like you do is the stuff of dreams here :(

      I have a suspicion that for you it will be like the old saying- you don't know what you have until you lose it!

    6. Re:I'm tired of subscription-based service by jrumney · · Score: 1

      So what is your lifetime subscription worth when they announce bankruptcy tomorrow? And if they are taken over by a new company, who decides to create a new class of "premium" channel which your lifetime subscription does not cover, and slowly migrate all but a few mainstream stations to the new premium class?

  10. Car by gatkinso · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sattellite radio is wonderful in the car. Oh well.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    1. Re:Car by grapes911 · · Score: 1

      I agree. My Sirius radio is in my car and stays there. I use my iPhone when in the office, but it just doesn't cut it in the car.

    2. Re:Car by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

      Not where I live. To many trees that cut off the signal.

  11. seems like a pretty great service? by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not to me. Radio should continue to be free.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to me. Radio should continue to be free.

      Radio (at least most of what is delivered over RF in the US) isn't free, you pay for it by being asked to listen to ads, most of the ads are pretty dumb too. Last I listened, it seemed like a third of the time is ads.

      There isn't much by the way of "TiVo" for broadcast radio to at least pare them down a bit. There are a few devices out there, but the reviews I've seen are lackluster.

    2. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Ragzouken · · Score: 1

      It's free in the sense that you don't lose anything from listening to it, which is the conventional definition of free.

    3. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Vectronic · · Score: 1

      I think that was part of his argument, that he doesn't consider his state of mind to be expendable.

    4. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      We are talking monetary payment, not 'time payment'.

      I remember the same argument with cable ' since you are paying its commercial free', now its more commercial the content.

      I hear there are commercials on some satellite radio stations now too.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      I remember the same argument with cable ' since you are paying its commercial free'

      Was that ever really true? Or is it just something that people misremember?

    6. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's free in the sense that you don't lose anything from listening to it, which is the conventional definition of free.

      If you think money is the only possible cost, then you're not paying attention.

      You don't consider the time listening to an ad to be lost?

    7. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had satellite radio for free when i was driving OTR. It has all the same problems as terrestrial radio, annoying commercials, repetitive playlists, wacky deejays you want to strangle. And on top of that it cut out whenever you passed under a bridge or near a large building or mountain.

      I really didnt see any point to it. It wasnt even worth using for free.

    8. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by enrevanche · · Score: 1

      Radio is not free. You pay for it with your time and by being brainwashed.

      Put it another way, you are the product and the advertiser is the customer.

    9. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Rukie · · Score: 1

      T.V. used to be free too, while cable was add free. Look what happened there.

      --
      Support the source, Open Source! An entire site developed with OSS
    10. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      No, i *clearly* remember it being a selling point for the 'movie channels'.

      Local broadcast of course still had them.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    11. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't consider the time listening to an ad to be lost?

      Whenever I've had a rental that had satellite radio, there have been plenty of commercials. There are commercials for frigging satellite radio, for starters. Dude! I'm already LISTENING to satellite radio--you don't have to sell me on it. And then, there are all these out-and-out ads for third parties.

      There's one they seem to run every ten minutes for some kind of "access my PC over the internet for dummies." I wanted to dig out my ears with a spoon.
       

    12. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You don't consider the time listening to an ad to be lost?

      Depends on what else I could be doing.

      Consider TV viewing. I could watch an hour show in 40-something minutes if I didn't have to watch the advertisements. That would give me more time to do something.

      Consider driving in a car listening to the radio. If I'm not listening to the ad, what else could I have been doing? What am I missing because I am being "forced" to listen to this ad?

    13. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your definition of free seems to exclude anything that actually exists...

    14. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, not if you do an imitation of the ad in a mocking and cartoonish voice. It's especially fun to mock them when you know it's for a service or product you will never consider buying in the first place. When you're alone in your car, it's not like anyone will know of this idiosyncratic "hobby" anyways. But if ads do too long a run and you get bored making fun of them, you may be able to find some other free stations that aren't in synch on the ad runs. Sometimes it's tricky though.

      Back on the main topic:
      I'm suprised they're looking at iPods or similar portable MP3 players as killing sattellite radio. I guess the up-featured aftermarket car stereos with built in storage and/or USB stick capability aren't prevalent enough for a mention yet? There's got to be a few good ones out there.

      Also agreed that the idea of trying to sell "satellite" radio over the internet is stupid. There's a huge slew of good bitrate streams on shoutcast that cost nothing beyond having a good internet connection availble, and my FOSS media player has few problems with finding and playing them. Worldwide listening fun, with quality ranging from other basement dwellers playing "DJ" or "talk radio" to actual commercial quality studio productions. Can't complain.

    15. Re:seems like a pretty great service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remind us, how much is your cable TV or satellite TV bill?

      Oh, I suppose "TV should continue to be free" too.

  12. What about "Internet killed the video star"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This old video short is the first thing that came to my head :)

  13. Makes me wonder by SGDarkKnight · · Score: 1

    Even though the internet is a much cheaper way of getting access to these wonderful radio stations, is the internet going to pay the overhead cost of obtaining people such as Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB? I mean, XM pays Howard Stern to have him air his shows on XM, i'm not sure how Oprah, the NFL and MLB do it, i would imagine it have to be basically the same concept. But who knows, i could probably be completely wrong in this case (wouldn't be the first time). Anyone else know?

    --

    ...A no smoking section in a restaurant is like having a no peeing section in a swimming pool...
    1. Re:Makes me wonder by geoskd · · Score: 1

      is the internet going to pay the overhead cost of obtaining people such as Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB? I mean

      Apperently you haven't seen any of the pay-for-content sites on the internet. I know your experiences as a slashdotter are quite limited, but surely you have come across one of those porn sites you have to give up a credit card number to get into... Same concept applies here. The internet is Free as in freedom, not Free as in beer, and it has always been that way.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    2. Re:Makes me wonder by SGDarkKnight · · Score: 1

      Apperently you haven't seen any of the pay-for-content sites on the internet. I know your experiences as a slashdotter are quite limited, but surely you have come across one of those porn sites you have to give up a credit card number to get into... Same concept applies here. The internet is Free as in freedom, not Free as in beer, and it has always been that way.

      So basically you're trading one subscription based service for another and just changing the way you listen to it. Also, something tells me that the average internet radio channel would not have the finacial support to pay for the same content that XM offers. Something tells me that you will simply get one internet radio site that will outdo the rest of them, they will lock in a few million subscribers and will offer all the big name shows for a low monthly cost. /. should do a poll attached to this story and ask the simple question of how many people are willing to pay for an internet based radio subscription.

      --

      ...A no smoking section in a restaurant is like having a no peeing section in a swimming pool...
    3. Re:Makes me wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a snotty little know-it-all. Shut the FUCK up!

    4. Re:Makes me wonder by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      So basically you're trading one subscription based service for another and just changing the way you listen to it.

      Yes. And no.

      I don't give a rat's patootie about Howard Stern, Oprah, or MLB. On the other had, I do like football--principally, the New England Patriots. So I might actually pay the New England Patriots organization in order to receive their games.

      It isn't all that expensive to stream stuff over the Internet. The Patriots organization could set it up in house, sell it themselves, and keep all the money.

      Personally, I think "the consolidators"--essentially the middle-men who consolidate all these programs--are the ones who are not long for this world.

  14. my music by kqc7011 · · Score: 1

    There are many new radios that now have usb and or card ports built in, let alone inputs for your ipods. With either I can listen to what I want when I want.

    --
    Passionately Indifferent
    1. Re:my music by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I paid $140 shipped to California for a JVC (I know, but this one is better, honestly - my last JVC, a dvd player, was poop, this is not) with not just line-in but also bluetooth for both phone and audio. My CD changer is now a USB flash drive. I don't use my ashtray for smoking so I ran the cable in there, my replacable CD changer lives in my ashtray. Talk about progress... It also came with a remotely located wired mic for the speakerphone, so I don't have to talk to my stereo when I use the phone capabilities. Granted, $140 is not pocket change, but the future is pretty much here. An iPod interface is only about $30 for the same unit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  15. so Pandora is available in my car now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This premise is entirely laughable. The only place I really listen to "radio" is in my car, a place that has no access to Pandora or Last.FM or any other internet streaming audio service.

    Sirius is an excellent idea, but a little too wedded to the old model of one way radio. If they could have built in some sort of connection back the other way to allow the simple stuff Pandora or Last.FM require for interaction, it could have been something really cool.

    As it was it just nice to be able to listen to decent radio in the middle of nowhere, wherever that might be.

  16. Why I dropped my Sirius subscription by zerofoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, I have an iPhone, and yes I run pandora on it. It works great, and I enjoy it at home and in the car.

    But that wasn't why I dropped Sirius.

    I had two radios, and the high-quality internet subscription. After the merger, some of my favorite stations either went away, or the playlists got cut down to 20 songs.

    I called and complained, but I was greeted with "sorry about that, how would you like two months free service?" Why would I want two more months of a service that sucks?

    The last straw was the sound quality problems. Octane 20 sounded like it was underwater. I guess Sirius cut back on the bandwidth reserved for some channels to make room for some of the XM offerings.

    In the end, it was bad music content, and terrible sound quality that killed it for me.

    I do miss Howard, but I hope that he'll go online once Sirius XM goes tits up.

    -ted

    1. Re:Why I dropped my Sirius subscription by tkrotchko · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I do miss Howard, but I hope that he'll go online once Sirius XM goes tits up."

      Howard Stern became non-entertaining right around the time that Sirius made him extremely wealthy. His rants against *the man* were entirely too forced when he actually became *the man*.

      Plus, he stopped putting effort into the show. Fridays off, long vacations, "Best of Howard Stern" but with the really controversial parts taken out (when you're *the man*, you don't risk your money being controversial), I assume he got married to the broken down model/girlfriend, whining about how his 4-day a week, 4 hour a day was just too hard on him anymore, Richard & Sal being the most creative on the show, fake "artie must be banned because he threw a CD" nonsense. Seriously, if Howard did that stuff when he was on FM, he wouldn't have lasted a week.

      Perhaps the show has gotten better in the last 12 months, but I took the advice of the true believers, and *just stopped listening*.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    2. Re:Why I dropped my Sirius subscription by corychristison · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I listen to Howard and Bubba mostly every day I can (Howard Mon-Thurs, Bubba Mon-Fri)

      Howard stated this past week that if Sirius ever went away, so would he. He has his money... why should he stick around?

      But, to be honest, Sirius is not going anywhere.

      Sirius brings in $2 Billion or so a year in Subscriptions and Radio Sales. The problem is the startup debts were too great to maintain in a problematic economy. They owe $3.9 billion. Which, in all honesty, is actually not bad. Most people I know who own homes own a $250,000 house but only make $45,000-$70,000/year. In contrast they are in better shape than most individuals.

      At present there are two companies looking at buying a good chunk of it to help put them back in better standing. One being EchoStar (former parent of Dish Network) and I believe the other is the parent of Comcast, or former parent or something.

      They are hoping one of these companies buys a large portion of their debt (in turn owning a large portion of the company via equity). It's basically going to come down to a bidding war and Chapter 11 Bankruptcy is their "get out of jail free" card.

      Chapter 11 will allow them to sever contracts that are not making any money. I, personally, don't know anyone who listens to the Oprah or Martha Stewart Channels (do you?). Combined that could be a nice chunk of savings.

      Howard will not go anywhere. His job was to bring the listeners to Satellite. He needed to bring at least 80,000 subscribers to pay his yearly salary. They currently have ~20,000,000 subscribers (w/merger).

      As for the sound quality loss I have not noticed at all. Although I only listen in my car and work vehicles I dunno if thats much of a test. :-)

    3. Re:Why I dropped my Sirius subscription by rho · · Score: 1

      Don't forget about the junky radios. Sure, some are reasonably reliable, but I know too many people--me included--who have gone through too many of them. You basically have to budget for another radio every few years.

      I like satellite radio, and think it's a good business model. But they need to unfuck their customer service and put the screws to their hardware manufacturers. Basically they need to run their business like a business and not as some kind of magic money machine based on dick and fart jokes by Howard Stern.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    4. Re:Why I dropped my Sirius subscription by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      I had been wondering about sound quality of Sirius/XM. So the bitrate varies station to station?

      I love Pandora and listen to that and several other streaming stations at home, but many online radio stations offer lousy bitrate (64 or 128kbps) which, at least to me, is very noticeable in the car with the volume up. I'd be more inclined to go satellite in-car if I knew there would be a few stations that had good playlists that didn't sound like i was listening through a sheet of corrugated tin.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  17. Bad time to grasp for a monopoly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sirius bought XM in the hopes of getting rid of its only real competitor in the satellite radio market. Even though it was called a "merger" it cost Sirius a lot of money (>$4 billion US), and they've apparently still got >$3 billion in debt.

    It probably was the right decision rather than have two independent businesses fail, but it's hard to dig yourself out of a hole that deep, especially with the combination of an entrenched free system (regular radio) and new technologies (internet). They're getting squeezed in the middle.

  18. Radio? What's that?? by markdavis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I never had any interest in satellite radio and not because I am adverse to paying for music.

    1) The radios were too large/comples
    2) The reception indoors was spotty
    3) Having to sign contacts and such was an immediate turnoff. Reminds me of the crap with cell phones.
    4) Having to pay for EACH radio didn't help matters

    And regular radio? Ug.

    1) The advertising is so extremely annoying- as if designed for 3-year-olds
    2) Screaming advertising or major volume jumps
    3) Same ads over and over and over and over and over
    4) Poor sound quality
    5) Idiotic DJ's
    6) Poor music selection. I mean, we must have 30 radio stations, and 3 types of music, none of which I like.

    I stopped listening to all radio eons ago. I just have mp3 everywhere. Granted, even with many hundreds of CD's, it still gets old after years.

    And the true irony? The Neilson Radio Ratings packet just arrived in my mailbox yesterday. This is the third time. I keep telling them I don't listen to *any* radio, and they keep saying "oh, well that is valuable information, please fill out the forms with blanks".

  19. $800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the point is that the next generation of "normal people" phones (the generic ones that people with little money get) will be of the iPhone caliber

    Even people who pay something ridiculously low like $90 per year to Virgin Mobile for a phone that they use mostly to arrange a ride home? AT&T quoted me a price eight times that for the kind of smartphone service plan you're describing.

    If I have to carry a cell phone anyway, it is damn convenient when it is also a music device that I can integrate into whatever stereo I happen to be near.

    The family owns four vehicles, and not one of their car stereos has a line-in jack. What workaround has worked for you?

    1. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      The family owns four vehicles, and not one of their car stereos has a line-in jack. What workaround has worked for you?

      You can get a USB/SD mp3 player that plugs into the lighter socket AND has a line-in which feeds into its FM-transmitter for $15. At least, that's what I paid for mine, shipped, from dealtime I believe.

      Most media-playing phones have a way to get a line-out.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in europe (UK, specificly). I own a G1, pay £29 a month. My car has a linein next to the cigarrete lighter. And the stereo has a doubledin fitting so I can fit a in-car-tv-gps-deely should I care to.

      What is Americas problem?

    3. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by peragrin · · Score: 2, Informative

      go to a car radio place, and ask options. Most car radios use proprietary plugs but do have an audio input jack. Crutchfield.com has a list. select your car, model and options and what you want from it. Also sticking with as close to generic audio input is best(not everyone has an ipod)

      Well your not the market. If you want the data plan that is sold separately. Just like your ISP is separate from your phone, and cable, and electricity, and water. I do find it odd that I need two ISP's. it would be great if I could pay just for one connection however this way if one is down the other is available.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    4. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

      go to a car radio place, and ask options.

      So now I'm supposed to buy a new car stereo with a 3.5mm audio input jack for the owners of each of these vehicles. Sticking with FM radio is much cheaper than that.

      If you want the data plan that is sold separately.

      And t-mobile.com just told me the cheapest data-only plan is $39.99 per month plus various taxes and unfunded-mandate-cost-recovery fees. It's cheaper than AT&T, which charges $20 more than that, but still much more expensive than satellite radio.

      Just like your ISP is separate from your phone, and cable

      I don't understand. In my area, the phone company offers DSL and FiOS, and the cable company offers cable Internet. Everyone else offers dial-up, which doesn't work too well for Internet radio.

    5. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      And how do I get my ${SPORTS_TEAM} fix from that?

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    6. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by skroops · · Score: 1

      I pay 45$ a month for family talk with rollover. i've got what might as well be 1 million minutes stocked up, and just added an iphone to my plan for $29.99 a month, with unlimited data. You just have to know how to play the game... if you go in wanting just a data-only plan, there's no room to find a good deal.

    7. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

      I pay 45$ a month

      And I pay less than $7 per month on Virgin Mobile, because I use a land line when I'm not trying to arrange a ride.

      You just have to know how to play the game

      Satellite radio has the convenience advantage that there's no "game" to play. You buy the radio and the connection kit, and then the plan costs $12.99 per month.

    8. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      That is why, despite all the iPhone addicts gushing about their phones, I believe the future belongs to the Netbook. Oh folks will still have their phones and probably their MP3 players(You can have my Sandisk when you pry it from my cold dead fingers) but even in BF Arkansas the Wifi is getting to be a pretty much everywhere thing. Trying to surf on a phone sucks, whereas with the Netbooks it really isn't too bad. And with the Ion platform coming up you will have the power for nice quality video as well as streaming audio like mentioned in TFA. But unlike the phones you can surf and write emails and docs comfortably.

      So while I think the iPhones may be popular with the trendies, here nobody buys into the smartphones. They just want too much and too long a contract for what you get. The Netbooks give you the Internet and I predict the phone companies will simply start selling more and more bundles that include the Netbook. And as you can see here that I am not the only one believing the market will go that way. Folks aren't going to pay those crazy prices for what they still see as a phone. But giving them a Netbook with the plan? That's a free laptop! They will go for that, no problem. So that is why I believe the iPhone all in one style will be relegated to the trendies and the business users with crackberry style phones. For everybody else I'm betting on the Netbook.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    9. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by jewps · · Score: 1

      That's easy. Most sports offer radio streams online, which most are WMVs so its compatible with virtually all WM6, iPhones, Blackberries, etc. I do this often with my CarPC to stream news and hockey games while I drive home.

    10. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netbooks are a fad, and are garbage. They'll fade soon.

    11. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 1

      even in BF Arkansas the Wifi is getting to be a pretty much everywhere thing.

      Until you get into a car or bus. A vehicle passes by Wi-Fi access points too quickly to even associate, let alone keep the stream going. Then you need either FM radio, satellite radio, or EDGE, and getting EDGE for a netbook in the United States is currently a lot more expensive than satellite radio. Or you have to record a stream at home and sync it to your music player.

    12. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I pay 45$ a month

      And I pay less than $7 per month on Virgin Mobile, because I use a land line when I'm not trying to arrange a ride.

      It's interesting. The number of people with a land line is steadily dropping every year. I don't think the trend towards cell phones and away from land lines is going to be reversing.

      Satellite radio has the convenience advantage that there's no "game" to play. You buy the radio and the connection kit, and then the plan costs $12.99 per month.

      More and more cars are coming with input jacks and other hookup options. More and more people are buying internet capable phones. I think the trend is clear. Fewer people in future will be wanting a separate subscription for satellite radio when their existing devices will provide the same functionality for free with more flexibility and more options.

      I'm not arguing that you should go with the trend, mind you, just that it seems to be what is happening now and likely to continue.

    13. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      So now I'm supposed to buy a new car stereo with a 3.5mm audio input jack for the owners of each of these vehicles. Sticking with FM radio is much cheaper than that.

      Agreed. However, the times, they are a-changin'.

      My 2001 car stereo had no line-in jack. My roomate's 2007 car does. More and more new cars do.

      The point of this is that Sirius/XM and terrestrial radio are going to be broadcasting to fewer and fewer people as time goes by.

    14. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Um, that is why I posted what I did about the cellular companies pushing Netbooks. Because they can offer it as a bundle with a card for their network and then you don't have the dropout problem. Lets be honest here: Most folks actually don't stray too far from home. Sure you have professional business travelers but they have their own gear that the company picks up the tab for. For the average user a Netbook+cellular network card will do everything they want it to do and then some.

      And as for the poster above saying it is a fad? Have you seen the Ion? That thing is already nicer than a lot of folks laptops are right now. Push an Ion platform Netbook with Cellular service and you have a home run, baby! Folks will be so happy that they have a little box that can play videos and WoW so smooth they won't even think about that Intel IGP laptop they have sitting at home. Mark my words the Ion is going to be big and the cellular networks just LOVE lockin customers. With an Ion Netbook they will probably have a waiting list of customers ready to hand them their monthly payments. And what company doesn't want to be in that position?

      I'm betting that the cell company that pushes an Ion laptop in a bundle deal will easily sell 6-8 to 1 when it comes to Netbooks VS smartphones. Despite what they do folks still see them as phones. The iPhone took off because it is by Apple and trendy. But the average folks ain't paying $600 for a phone, I don't care how fancy it is. But to them a Netbook is just a little laptop, and to them laptops are more expensive and more "worth it" so they won't mind the lock in, especially if the company gives them an Ion Netbook for $100 with the plan. Trust me the Netbooks will go nowhere but up.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    15. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      The family owns four vehicles, and not one of their car stereos has a line-in jack. What workaround has worked for you?

      Those old cassette tape-shaped adapters that came out when CD players were entering the market work great with iPods (and pretty much everything else with an earphone jack).

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    16. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Those old cassette tape-shaped adapters

      don't fit in a car stereo that has only AM/FM/CD, no tape. And the tape decks in the stock car stereos in some Saturn cars just seem to spit out my Philips tape adapter after a few seconds.

    17. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Zenaku · · Score: 1

      But the average folks ain't paying $600 for a phone, I don't care how fancy it is.

      You may or may not be right about where netbooks are going, but this isn't a valid argument against the smartphone. For starters, the iPhone only cost that much for its first six months or so of existence. It now costs $199. What do you suppose a device with the same capabilities will cost in a few years? My first Motorola RAZR cost my $500. What can I say, early adopter tax. A year later they were selling them for $99, and a year after that the RAZR was the standard phone given away for with a new wireless plan.

      You may be very right that netbooks will take off if THEY start to be given away with a plan, but I'm not sure about selling 6 to 1. Smart phones have really done an excellent job of demonstrating that you don't need a full-fledged computer to accomplish most of what you want to do when you're away from your desk, and while a netbook beats the pants off of a full-sized laptop for portability, it still isn't something I can stick in my pants pocket and carry around all day.

      If I am going to a conference or lecture series or something, sure, I'd pick one over a laptop. But as a device to have with me 24/7? No thanks.

      --
      If fate makes you a motorcycle, you become a motorcycle.
    18. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      don't fit in a car stereo that has only AM/FM/CD, no tape.

      Not having owned a car with no media inputs since, well, ever, may I suggest an I-Dog? I'm pretty much out of other ideas.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    19. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Aaahhh....I see your problem. You don't deal with consumers much, do you? You have to think like them. Most folks you could show them a phone that jumped up and danced like the WB frog and it'd still be a phone. A nice phone, but it is still a phone. Hell half the folks I know don't know how to work half the features on the phone they got now, and you think they could work a smartphone?

      But they understand how WinXP works. They know how to launch programs, they know how to surf on it, check email, not a problem there. So for them there is more Perceived value in the Netbook, since to them it is a "baby laptop" and they value those and know how they work compared to a complex and strange smartphone. That is why I thought the modified Xandros OS was smart on the EEE. It just gave them some simple icons with things like Web and Email. No need to actually learn anything. Now do you see why I think the Netbook will win over smartphone?

      While I have no doubt for smart guys like yourself that don't get scared of manuals and don't want to lug even a Netbook the smartphone is a better value, never underestimate the value of familiar to John and Jane Public. Smartphones they don't know how to work. Laptops and therefor Netbooks? Not a problem. Just flip the switch and start surfing.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    20. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by Zenaku · · Score: 1

      Deal with consumers? No, I suppose not, in that I am neither a salesperson, nor a marketer, nor a tech-support representative. I do happen to know some consumers, though. I and everybody I know is one, in fact.

      I am trying to think like a consumer here. I follow your argument that a lot of the general population does not use most of the features on their phone, and that historically smart phones have been non-intuitive to use. But I think you are missing (or that we just disagree) on two things.

      Firstly, that smart-phone interfaces have gotten a LOT less complicated. The iPhone is a poster child of simple, obvious, controls. It's a simple panel of icons, just like that modified Xandros on the EEE. My mother even got a Blackberry Storm recently, and I assure you she is not a techie.

      Secondly, these John and Jane Publics that you mention, who prefer basic phones and are going to snap up all the netbooks because they know how a laptop works -- I don't think they are in this market at all. You think that they don't use smart-phones because they are intimidated by them or can't figure them out, and so would jump on a familiar concept like a "baby laptop." I am not convinced that is the case. I think that they don't know how to use a smart-phone, and don't own a smart-phone, because they don't care about surfing or checking their email when they are away from home.

      Now which of us is right? Only time will tell. Netbook sales are obviously taking off, and I don't dispute that they are big right now. I can see them replacing smartphones for people who need to do more involved or intensive computer work while they are on the go -- sales guys who give presentations, programmers, whatever. If you're the kind of person who needs a laptop with them, then a smaller more portable laptop is attractive. And I can see them being bought by some John and Jane Publics specifically to take on family vacations and the like.

      But I still don't see a future where everybody carries a netbook around with them all day every day. The people who want to stay connected all the time are the ones who know how to use a smartphone, and the people who don't know how to use a smartphone don't know because they don't need to stay connected all the time. So I think 6 to 1 netbook to smartphone sales is optimistic of you.

      Now I may end up being wrong, but it isn't that I don't understand your argument and don't know how to think like a consumer. I just disagree with your analysis.

      --
      If fate makes you a motorcycle, you become a motorcycle.
    21. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Actually the biggest market adopters I have seen for the Netbooks and laptops have been the very average. Kids, soccer moms, folks I would have NEVER thought of with a portable PC. hell my 66 year old dad bought a laptop! I said "What in the HELL are you going to do with a laptop?" He said "I like to be able to check my email and read the news during commercials on CSI." so while I doubt he has ever been more than 40 yeards with the thing he sits there of an evening while CSI is on and when the commercials hit he is reading Google News and checking the local weather. And my dad is about as freaking clueless as they come when it comes to tech.

      And while I agree that all of your arguments are quite valid, and I do believe that smartphones will end up snatching a lot of the business guys as well as college kids and those that do a lot of traveling, the way they are marketing the Netbook is frankly brilliant. I walked into a phone shop in LR selling a Netbook bundle deal. And on one side you had a smartphone for $99 with a 2 year commitment, and on the other you had a picture phone that wasn't as nice, but it had a cable tying it to a Celeron EEE and the sign said "Buy this Mini Laptop for $99 with a 2 year commitment and get the phone and cables absolutely FREE!". And as ashamed as I am to admit this, I was tempted. Even though you and I know there is no such thing as free, and they would have got me with the contract, it is just something about the human brain that sees the word FREE! in giant letters that kind of kills our rational brains. But John Public is going to see a phone on his left or a phone AND a "mini laptop" on his right and one of them is "absolutely FREE!" which do you think he'll pick? I'm betting he goes to the one that has the "absolutely FREE!" sign in front of it.

      But as you say time will tell. Unlike some of those posting here I don't believe that either Netbooks OR smartphones will turn out to be "just a fad" and that both will find their place in the market. The problem with smartphones IMHO, is that a LOT of the buzz is built around the "I'll admit bloody brilliantly designed" iPhone. But iPhone is tied to one service last I checked and are still pretty high. High enough that John and Jane Public aren't going to get them for $99 with a contract. And I still think the Ion GPU placed into Netbooks is frankly going to blow people away. Can you imagine how many of those $99 Netbooks with "absolutely FREE!" phones they would have been selling if the Netbook was running WoW with all the snazzy graphics? Either way to be a tech nut right now is a good thing. We have so many choices it would make ones head swim. We will just have to see which combo of pricing+marketing+features make it to the top.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    22. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      you pay for a landline? how much is that bill? $20-$30 a month.

      My cell phone is my only phone. I save money by not having two phones, and my cell gets much better long distance rates(ie its free just burning minutes)

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    23. Re:$800 per year for a cell phone? by tepples · · Score: 1

      you pay for a landline? how much is that bill? $20-$30 a month.

      I share this bill with other people who live in the same house. And aren't there still some telcos that don't offer naked DSL?

  20. Sirius over the Internet by TheMonkeyhouse · · Score: 1

    I got Sirius to try when i bought my new car (which my wife now drives every day - go figure!) but i actually listen to Sirius online.

    However, they called me last week and told me that from sometime in March they were going to start charging people EXTRA for the online service! How stupid can you get? Trying to charge people more for Internet radio?

    I wonder if the dinosaurs had Sirius/XM's marketing department?

  21. Citation needed by tepples · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sirius XM has been eclipsed by something far cheaper and more convenient: the Internet.

    Where are you living that adding 15,000 minutes (ca. 8 hours/day) of streaming 64 kbps from the Internet to your monthly mobile phone plan is "far cheaper" than a subscription to satellite radio? Or were you talking about recording at home and then time-shifting to the office or the car, for which satellite radio would still hold a significant lead in convenience?

    1. Re:Citation needed by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? I have all-you-can-eat data on my phone plan and it only costs me $15/month for the first phone and $7.50 a month for the two additional phones.

      The phone uses no minutes when using data.

    2. Re:Citation needed by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Most of the day you're stationary, and can listen to internet radio on a fixed broadband connection. There is no extra cost on ADSL or cable for listening to 8 hours of streaming 64kbit radio.

      Most people are mobile for less than an hour a day.

    3. Re:Citation needed by argent · · Score: 1

      Or were you talking about recording at home and then time-shifting to the office or the car, for which satellite radio would still hold a significant lead in convenience?

      I have one word for you: podcasts.

      Time shifting is more convenient than broadcast now.

    4. Re:Citation needed by dnaumov · · Score: 1

      Where are you living that adding 15,000 minutes (ca. 8 hours/day) of streaming 64 kbps from the Internet to your monthly mobile phone plan is "far cheaper" than a subscription to satellite radio?

      Finland.

      Unlimited mobile data at 384kbit for 9.80eur/month.

    5. Re:Citation needed by tepples · · Score: 1

      Most of the day you're stationary

      What occupation?

      and can listen to internet radio on a fixed broadband connection.

      Only if you have an office job. Otherwise, you have to buy songs at roughly 99 cents a pop and put them on a music player.

      Most people are mobile for less than an hour a day.

      I don't understand how you calculated that, even for someone with a desk job. A bus trip takes 40 minutes: an average 10 minute walk to the bus stop + wait for the bus (which often runs late), an average 15 minute ride to the transfer station, and an average 15 minute ride from the transfer station to the destination. This makes an 80 minute round trip to work, not even counting trips to the grocery store, etc.

    6. Re:Citation needed by edmicman · · Score: 1

      Until tiered pricing and bandwidth caps come into play?

    7. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True most of my day is stationary, but no streaming music at work and long hours + long commute means i'm home for ~10-12 hrs a day which is enough to eat and sleep and catch up on some tv, no time to download new music and move it to mp3 player and remember to take it with me in the morning.
       
      That's a hassle, Satellite Radio is just like FM, new every day, works everywhere, and requires no extra effort from me beyond turning my car on.
       
        I also work an a large enough city to have terrestrial signal as well so i can listen to it while at work (without being near a window). My commute is over an hour every day and sometimes longer, downloading music and creating playlists and just keeping up with all that would
       
      1. Cost too much - my subscription is $38 every 3 months OR Unlimited internet service for my Palm Centro is $40/mo from Verizon(as the article suggests) OR Free if i do podcasts OR $1/song from Itunes/$15 or more per CD
      2. Requre me to spend hours of extra time downloading/buying music and putting it on an MP3 player
      3. Require me to buy ADDITIONAL car stereo equipment to connect my MP3 Player/Cell Phone on my stock radio

      And as others have mentioned i listed to some talk radio and call in from time to time which has no equivalent in the world of podcasts

      I believe your points are valid, though they don't fit the majority of people as you mentioned. There is no extra "cost" but having the "ability" to stream music at work is a luxury i don't have so satellite and FM are my only real options and i would have to buy a new radio for FM since i use the line-out on my satellite radio to the line-in on my work comp and listen to it over the speakers

    8. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mind sharing a couple? I am always on the lookout for interesting geek-oriented podcasts for long road trips.

      My personal faves are LOSTcasts and FLOSS Weekly w\ Leo Laporte (the TechTV guy) and Randal Schwartz.

    9. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most quality phones offer unlimited bandwidth as part of the service.

    10. Re:Citation needed by argent · · Score: 1

      Engines of our Ingenuity is the obvious one.

  22. Re:How about this: by Vectronic · · Score: 1

    You should be confined to a small room, without food, until you are no longer alive.

  23. Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI-XM by VinylRecords · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Approximately 25% of Americans own portable standalone MP3 players, 76% of households in the U.S. own a portable electronic device many of which are capable of playing music (such as a PSP, phone, blackberry, etc.), 99% of American households have televisions in them, Americans own more than 1 billion radios with free AM/FM broadcasts to receive, Americans also play tons of video and computer games, Americans go to the movies, and the form of entertainment that Americans prefer most according to most recent studies...reading.

    Sirius-XM has to compete with EVERYTHING, not just other forms of audio broadcasts like internet radio or over the air AM/FM radio. Every activity you do other than listen to Sirius-XM is in direct competition with Sirius-XM, the less you find yourself using the service, the less likely you are to renew the service, and that's if you get it in the first place.

    If you have a short commute to work, is paying for a monthly radio fee worth it? Probably not if you only listen to a few minutes of radio. And if your commute is long, is satellite radio better than free radio? The talk shows have commercials on both, so unless you really want to listen to a Sirius-XM exclusive broadcaster, the answer is no again. But what about music? Sirius-XM has commercial free (for the most part) music, AM-FM does not. But with CDs and I-PODs (through car speakers) you can play your own music and audio books or whatever commercial free and you control the entire play list.

    And once you leave your car, Sirius-XM offers almost nothing that is worth paying a monthly fee for, unless you crave their exclusive talk radio content like Howard Stern. All of the sports game radio broadcasts can be gotten with a superior service (like MLB.TV for professional baseball) or for free over AM-FM. And out of your car you've got the other alternatives, TV, movies, video games, reading, that studies show most Americans prefer over listening to any form of radio whether it's AM-FM or satellite.

    Sirius-XM also spent enormous amounts of money securing exclusive contracts with radio businesses and entities. Howard Stern cost Sirius over $500 million ALONE and they gave him over $100 million in stocks that is now worth next to nothing. Factor in the costs of hiring Oprah, Martha Stewart, Jamie Foxx, the NFL, MLB, NASCAR, etc. and you have another major reason why the business is going under. Even more ironic was that Sirius and XM when they were competing against each other spent so money to OUTBID each other for these exclusives and now that they are MERGED TOGETHER they are stuck with each others' MASSIVE DEBT from taking on these insanely burdening contracts and the entire reason that they spent so much money in the first place is not a factor any longer. Sirius spent $500 million to get Howard Stern instead of XM (who offered significantly less according to Stern) but now Sirius-XM is the same company.

    Another reason that Sirius-XM is in the tank is because car sales are down. Many car dealerships had deals with either Sirius or XM (and now with the new merged company Sirius-XM) to include a satellite radio with a new car with two or three free months subscription. The idea was that people would get used to having the satellite radio in their vehicle and they would continue to subscribe. But auto sales are down and this model of placing radio units in news cars has gone away for the most part leaving another dead end for Sirius.

    With the economy going sour continually, how many extra subscribers does Sirius think it's going to get? Mel Karmazin, CEO of Sirius, keeps lowering projections of new subscribers every month. And the number of users canceling their subscriptions must also be getting higher considering the economy as well.

    Fact is that Sirius has $3.5 billion in debt. If they declare bankruptcy is allows them to void their expensive c

  24. Whoops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Cut myself off...

    "He has no idea what Satellite radio is, and why people want it. So he"

    So he imposes his own idea of what the market is (which is quite simply, incorrect) and then has a way to make a satellite service that works in any part of North America and turns it into an urban service that will stream audio to me as long as I'm very near a 3G cellphone service.

    Just. Dumb.

  25. Not Quite by tjstork · · Score: 1

    It's simpler than that. It's just that, between iTunes and existing radio, that's really all the content you need while you are driving. For local sports and talk you don't need internet radio. There's a few million people that have satellite for Howard Stern, but that's really the extent of it. If you are a right winger, there's some sort of talk radio on the AM band that has the celebrities you want, and for the left wing, there is NPR. For everyone else, you already get your local sports on radio, and if you want music, you can plug in your own itunes collection.

    --
    This is my sig.
  26. world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    World's best?
    More like the best in the US.
    Remember the US != World.

  27. Re:Radio? What's that?? by DoninIN · · Score: 3, Informative

    N. P. R.

  28. From another perspective.... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ford Prefect is from a small planet somewhere in the vicinity of Betelgeuse.... he has considerable difficulty understanding why humans tend to continually state the obvious, such as "It's a nice day", or "You're very tall", or "So this is it. We're all going to die", or "expensive subscription services are going to lose massive amounts of business during an economic downturn when cheap and free alternatives with more selection are readily available."

  29. Do you think so? by tkrotchko · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "3G wireless works just fine in the car"

    Not really. The appeal of satellite radio on car trips is that even when I can't get cell phone service at all, I can get Satellite radio. If you just drive 10 minutes to work in the suburbs near a city, then perhaps your idea is fine. But the bulk of the U.S. does not get 3G service. Then you'd have to deal with the issue of how you tie your smart phone into the sound system of your car. While this is conceptually easy, from an infrastructure standpoint, you'd have to get all cell-phone makes agree they will support bluetooth streaming of stereo sound, you'd have to get the carriers to agree to allow this to happen, then you'd have to get the automobile manufacturers to tightly integrate this capability into the sound systems. Not to mention the man/machine interface that would support tuning stations inside an automobile without fiddling with a smart phone. These problems will take years to solve.

    I don't think smart phone data plans allow the kind of access that would let you stream audio hours a day. Seems to me if significant numbers of people started streaming media on their smart phones everywhere, 3G service capacity just isn't there to support more than a handful of users. You'd end up with higher rates on your smart phones, or they plans would get severely curtailed, or both.

    I think what's likely to happen here is that Sirius/XM will declare bankruptcy, and force the banks to restructure the debt. I'd hate to be holding a lot of paper for Sirius/XM right now; you'll be lucky to get 25 cents on the dollar.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Do you think so? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Not really. The appeal of satellite radio on car trips is that even when I can't get cell phone service at all, I can get Satellite radio. If you just drive 10 minutes to work in the suburbs near a city, then perhaps your idea is fine.

      Well, YMMV, of course, but Sprint's Mobile Broadband coverage is pretty good throughout most of the state of Florida, where I live.

      But you're right of course when it comes to cross-country driving. Cellular coverage period sucks throughout the bulk of the U.S., AAMOF. Digital cellular coverage sucks even worse. Of course that's due to the fact that most people don't live in "the bulk of the U.S." ;)
       

    2. Re:Do you think so? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      The appeal of satellite radio on car trips is that even when I can't get cell phone service at all, I can get Satellite radio.

      Agreed. The question is: How often am I doing car trips? As gas prices get higher, maybe not so much. Spending $10 a month for music might be an expense that goes.

      Oh, and before you bring up truckers and traveling salesmen, I'm not convinced they are a big enough market to keep satellite in business.

      But the bulk of the U.S. does not get 3G service.

      Agreed. But do you think it will always be that way? I don't.

      Then you'd have to deal with the issue of how you tie your smart phone into the sound system of your car.

      My 2001 car has no convenient way to do this. My roomate's 2007 car has an audio jack. I'm pretty sure this is becoming standard in most car radios nowadays, so you can plug in your phone and talk hands-free.

      Not to mention the man/machine interface that would support tuning stations inside an automobile without fiddling with a smart phone.

      I don't believe this would be a difficult thing to overcome, but I'll go on to the next level and say, "Why would we need to tune our stations to begin with?"

      Pandora, in my opinion, is something like what we'll see in the future--basically, lots of different streams "narrowcasting" to our particular tastes and interests. Rather than having a separate channel for "rock", "punk", "heavy metal", etc., you'll have a system which generates playlists based on the kind of music you like. So you'll be less likely to have to change the channel. And, if something comes up that you don't like, you'll hit the "That song sucks" button and it will go on to the next song on the playlist.

      So rather than choosing between "the rock station" or "the heavy metal station", you'll probably choose between, say, Pandora or Last.fm based upon their ability to correctly guess what kind of music you like.

      You might also see some intelligence put into other things, such as news and weather. If you're in your car traveling down interstate 405, you don't really need to care about the accident on interstate 210 or about the plane crash in Buffalo or that there's a nasty storm in Louisiana. Location, matched with interest, might interrupt your music to let you know that California just passed a budget or that Coldplay just won a grammy. Again, rather than a "news broadcast" full of stuff you don't care about, you may see more short blurbs (or medium or long blurbs depending on your interest in the story) which get dropped between songs.

    3. Re:Do you think so? by radish · · Score: 1

      But the bulk of the U.S. does not get 3G service.

      The bulk of the area maybe not, but the bulk of the population certainly does. And it's the population that matters. Most car journeys are short, most people never take these long cross-country drives you're talking about. They want something to play music for the 10-60 min commute each day. Personally I don't do streaming (because I like to choose what I hear) but both me & my wife use our ipods in the car every day (she listens to audiobooks - try getting those on XM). I haven't ever even switched on the radio in my car, and I certainly have no interest whatsoever in paying $13 a month for more channels. I'm sure I'm not representative of "the common man" - but I'm sure I'm not unique either.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    4. Re:Do you think so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually between Verizon and Alltel, I'd say the bulk of the US *does* have 3G. But that said, it still isn't a replacement for satellite radio for the other reasons you give. And although the bulk has 3G, a lot of the US doesn't (and some has no service whatsoever).

                I streamed slacker to my computer during a trip when there was nothing on the radio, it was fine, but not like using a radio. I did have it crap out several times when the cell signal got too low and slow though.

  30. Outdated, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a Delphi RoadyXT in my car. The stations are all _commercial-free_, which is a lot more than I can say for most "free" online radio stations.

    Oh, and about paying a monthly fee per radio: we have one console that we can share between both cars and our house. It's great for parties or background music in the house, since again, it's commercial-free.

    What are my other options?

    - Get Verizon's VCast, where I get to use an awkward cell phone browser to stream music at what sounds like 16 kbps.

    - Get a data plan ($60/mo for 5 GB) and stream music--where data works--in my car.

    Both of these wouldn't work well in the car anyway, since I couldn't just punch in another station number at a red light.

    Plus, couldn't Siruis/XM just force Congress to give them billions of dollars? They seem happy to prop up Detroit's failed business model...

  31. Which means: by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 0, Troll
    The Democratic House and Senate, which is in the pocket of the Entertainment Branch of the Ideological State Apparatus, will do its best to smother internet radio in its crib. Look for filth like Feinstein to lead the charge.

    I do not say this with great glee - I voted for Obama et al. But I do understand the limitations and contradictions of the Democratic Party. They will try to muzzle it and kill it, and if it won't die, then they will try to put a meter on it.

    Mark my words on this.

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  32. The Internet will not solve the whole problem... by Jay+Maynard · · Score: 1

    ...or even most of it. It won't get good radio in my car on a rural Minnesota highway, or in my airplane - much less getting me weather in my airplane.

    --
    Disinfect the GNU General Public Virus!
  33. Oh Oh by stonedcat · · Score: 1

    I heard you on my wireless on track fifty-two, lying awake my router tuning in on you, my dsl it didn't stop you coming through.

    Oh Oh

    They made us pay by enacting douchebag fees, decided by some who don't understand technology, and now the internet is raped as you can see.

    Oh Oh

    --
    You can't take the sky from me.
  34. Poor Sound Quality by ToryGA1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I had SiruisXM service and eventually had to cancel it due to the poor sound quality. As they added more channels, they had to increase the compression on the existing channels to make room. After a while the music channels began to have the tinny quality of AM radio. It was intolerable. I've never been able to figure out why more people don't seem to be bothered by the inferior audio quality. When FM radio begins to have a richer, more satisfying audio quality than subscription radio, then the value of satellite radio becomes dubious. This is the reason I canceled, and one of the other reasons I don't see them lasting.

    1. Re:Poor Sound Quality by ThurstonMoore · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with you. My wife has satellite radio in her car and it had been a while since I heard it. I rode in her car a couple of weeks ago and the sound quality was horrible. I told her she should cancel and she agreed.

    2. Re:Poor Sound Quality by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      I've never been able to figure out why more people don't seem to be bothered by the inferior audio quality.
      Are you kidding? People rip CDs to mp3 all day long and congratulate themselves on saving space. They don't seem to acknowledge that the savings has to come from somewhere, and they don't seem to notice the quality change, so why would they notice the poor quality from satellite?

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  35. So much for new music... by SandieK · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I listen to Sirius primarily in my car. On occasion, I listen to one of what was XM via the music only channels on DirecTV.
      When/if Satellite goes belly up, there goes my access to new music. Otherwise, Ill just plug in my mp3 and listen to that. I never liked FM radio all that much, going back long before Satellite came around.
    I use winamp on my computer (okay, so I could go to shoutcast radio), but I never really got into services like pandora.
    The whole thing about playing pandora through there iphone in the car...As Ive never owned an iAnything (yet), I have questions about that. Not all that relevant, though. My next MP3 will (reluctantly) be the iPod touch. Continuous 3G connection on the iPhone is one thing, but plain ol' wireless in a vehicle via the iTouch? Not so much...unless you have one of those new vehicles that apparently have that feature.

    And I just had to upgrade my radio too (it was five years old, the buttons stopped working). Atleast I got it dirt cheap at Circuit City. Oh well.

  36. Building the perfect ghetto car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Any MP3 player and a small FM transmitter with a stereo headphone jack can play your MP3 player over the air into your car's radio. There are also devices to convert stereo headphone out from an MP3 or CD player into a cassette tape that can be played in a car's cassette player. And even then, some cars have a stereo line in, you can plug any device such as an MP3 player into the stereo jack in your car's radio. And even then, a stand alone CD or tape functions just as well as an MP3 player in the car for most people."

    Well, sure, and if you want to add to the clutter, you can tape one of those pocket GPS's to the windshield to complete the look. Top it off with a bunch of CD's and McDonalds wrappers around your car, and you have the perfect automobile interior.... if you're a homeless guy who lives in his car.

    Some of us actually want something elegant and integrated in our car.

    And oh... we prefer not to crash into people and things simply because we're fiddling with our iPod. Seriously man, even if you don't care if you live in a pig sty, some of us would prefer a safer solution than doing a one-handed move with the iPod to find something new, or turn it off when the phone rings (another story!).

    1. Re:Building the perfect ghetto car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I own and older car (2001 Pontiac) and even the high end stereo offering, the Monsoon system did not have line in. The fm transmitter is not viable as there are so many stations around here that I end up having to switch the frequency every 5-10 miles. I put the cassette adapter in, pushed the wire into the surrounding bezel (yes, you can see the 1 inch of wire coming out of the casette deck and going to the bezel) and inside the trim down to the floor. I ran the wire back up to the cup holder where I sit my phone) There is enough wire that I can lift it up to eye level while driving, so its one a quick glance at the screen instead of fumbling for controls. I don't even have to look down (as would be needed with controls on the stereo or steering wheel) Very little visible wire and safer. Works for me. YMMV.

  37. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by Miamicanes · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't forget the biggest mistake of all: the merger.

    Had the merger not occurred, Sirius would be mostly breaking even today. Still operating at a slight loss, but its existence as a going concern would not be in jeopardy. XM, on the other hand, would have gone bankrupt a few months ago, and now be in the hands of new owners. The big debt that's coming due in a few days is *XM* debt. Sirius' original debt wasn't due to cause problems for a few more years.

    Mel has destroyed Sirius as a company. He took on XM and its debt load, and achieved nothing besides alienating the customers of both networks for no good reason. The amount of money he saved by consolidating channels was literally pocket change compared to the cost of owning two sets of satellites. I'll give Sirius a pass on Howard for the moment, because he probably WAS worth it to pre-merger Sirius. Remember, before Howard, XM was clearly in #1, and Sirius was the struggling "also-ran". By the end of Year H+1, Sirius was in the lead, and almost making a profit (mostly through creative accounting, but that's still better than XM could do). He wanted XM's bandwidth to launch seatback Barney videos for kids, but ended up gutting the audio quality of both services to add more channels with lower audio fidelity.

    The REAL cost savings would have been for Sirius to sell off both of XM's geostationary satellites & broadcast the two data streams formerly handled by them using Sirius' Molniya satellites(*). Rural indoor users would have either needed a proper outdoor antenna with view of the entire sky, or had to move the antenna puck from windowsill to windowsill like Sirius users do, but it would have improved XM's mobile coverage in mountainous areas (where cars were in the shadow of mountains relative to geostationary satellites) and literally saved them hundreds of millions of dollars.

    ---

    (*) Sirius has a constellation of 4 satellites in modified Molniya orbits. Basically, one satellite is a spare, and the other 3 are arranged so that at any given moment, one satellite is (more or less) "straight up" (relative to Iowa), one satellite is near the horizon, and one is on the other side of the earth. XM's constellation consisted of two satellites in conventional geostationary orbits over the equator.

    Sirius and XM divided their bands into 3 slices, each of which carried the full bitstream. Two slices were broadcast by satellite, and the third slice was broadcast via terrestrial repeaters. I'd be seriously shocked if Sirius' satellites were physically incapable of broadcasting a slice of XM's band, and vice-versa. For one thing, satellite transmitters tend to be designed with fairly open-ended capabilities ANYWAY (they're so expensive to launch, with so much lead time, that the satellite's owner would be financially suicidal to not launch them with a "Plan B" in case the original user falls through. For another, I'm sure XM and Sirius both entertained the prospect that the other's satellites could be knocked out by space debris, solar flare, or some other malfunction... and faced with the prospect of shutting down or paying the other extortionate fees to carry their signal, would grudgingly pay the fees.

  38. XM by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    I hope they figure something out, because I for one, do not want to go back to "commercial" radio where you have more commercials than music.

    1. Re:XM by kabz · · Score: 1

      There is a place for commercial community stations. It's viable to support a small local radio station with commercials, and not too bad to listen to, since, at least the content is local.

      National commercial radio is rubbish though.

      --
      -- "It's not stalking if you're married!" My Wife.
    2. Re:XM by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      I hope they figure something out, because I for one, do not want to go back to "commercial" radio where you have more commercials than music.
      Oh, they'll figure something out all right. They'll figure out that they can charge you AND make you listen to commercials, just like cable did.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  39. The internet only goes so far by phleb3 · · Score: 1

    The main reason I have satellite radio is for my car, not my home. Saying that the internet is just as good misses the point.

  40. Howard Stern by tedgyz · · Score: 1

    Sorry to disappoint all you high-brow elitists, but Howard Stern is the ONLY reason I subscribe to Sirius. The music channels suxx0r. NFL broadcasts are nice to have, but only useful for part of the year.

    I will go where Howard goes. If he broadcasts on sonar, I'll drop my antenna in the ocean and listen on Sonarus radio.

    --
    "No matter where you go, there you are." -- Buckaroo Banzai
    1. Re:Howard Stern by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      I'm buying up whales as I type.

  41. do you live under a bridge in an orchard? troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'everyone owns an Iphone'?

    did you drink the Apple flavored kool-aid (that
    is laced with a mindnumbing, soul sucking
    brain-washing drug?)

    Ok, there isn't really any thing like that . . .

    Why don't you just admit it: you are an
    apple troll.

  42. What carrier, what location, and what voice plan? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Are you kidding? I have all-you-can-eat data on my phone plan and it only costs me $15/month for the first phone

    What carrier? What location? What voice plan is required along with this data plan? And is it truly all-you-can-eat, or did you miss a "fair usage policy" in the TOS?

  43. Re:Radio? What's that?? by thopkins · · Score: 1

    You don't need to sign a contract with satellite radio. I've been month to month on XM for a long time.

  44. What happens when you get off the main road.... by alexschmidt · · Score: 1

    If you live in some of the more sparsely populated parts of Canada/US you know how quickly cellphones signals disappear when you 'get off the main road'. If you don't live near a major city or town, you may be relying on dial-up internet. That makes programming your music gadget problematic. That's what makes services like this great: You can be anywhere and still get great radio. If I was on the road all the time, or lived out in the country, I would definitely subscribe to this.

    1. Re:What happens when you get off the main road.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, my air card still gets 100kb/s in the middle of the NM desert... i really dont think its as big a problem as you may think.

      In my 2 years of OTR truck driving, i found maybe 4 or 5 places on the interstate highway system where my aircard just flat wouldnt work, and in all of those cases i was in the mountains where satellite radio doesnt work very well either.

  45. Anything for US residents? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Where are you living that adding 15,000 minutes (ca. 8 hours/day) of streaming 64 kbps from the Internet to your monthly mobile phone plan is "far cheaper" than a subscription to satellite radio?

    Finland.

    But Slashdot is in the United States. What U.S. carriers offer all you can eat data for $12.64 per month without tying it to a voice plan that costs three times that?

  46. Re:Radio? What's that?? by GXTi · · Score: 0

    NPR just spent the last week and a half spamming my ear-hole with 1-800-962-9862 begging for donations. The sad thing about their business model is that I might donate if any donation I'm personally capable of making could make the pledge drives go away faster, but as it is I would see no fruit from my labor.

  47. Don't fall for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when the "Fairness Doctrine" (aka, Obama's Censorship Act) kicks in, pay radio is the only place you will get real information uncontrolled by the government.

  48. Good Physics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "However, what we need is a mesh network, because otherwise we will lose net neutrality and then you'll be back to having to listen to clearchannel because no other kind of internet radio will work on your mobile internet connection any more."

    Congratulations. You said the magic phrase, mesh networks. Now here's another magic word, latency. And another, monopoly. See the problem now? Remember it's not really "your" mobile network.

    1. Re:Good Physics. by More_Cowbell · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm missing how latency matters when listening to the radio.

      --
      Experience teaches only the teachable. -AH
    2. Re:Good Physics. by stuffman64 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Though it's rather a niche segment, many people watch a sporting event and tune into the radio broadcast coverage of the game to listen to the radio announcers. The team's own radio announcers are oftentimes much better at knowing what the hell's going on than the ones on TV.

      --
      --- At my sig, unleash hell.
    3. Re:Good Physics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SYNCHRONIZE LATENCY NOW!!!

    4. Re:Good Physics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially if you live in Philadelphia.

      Just about everyone with a clue and lived anywhere on the East Coast (the local radio station that carries the Phillies can be heard in Florida at night) turned the sound down on their TVs and had the radio on during the World Series. Harry Kalas is an infinitely better broadcaster than any national network announcer.

    5. Re:Good Physics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got a solution for that. Just have really long headphones wires. Long enough so that sound takes three seconds to travel over it. (Or as many seconds as tv delay is.)

  49. Not convinced of the economy of that one... by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Satellite radio subscriptions are around $15 / month.

    Data plans for the iPhone are around $30-40, plus what you are already paying for voice service.

    Granted, if you really need the unlimited data plan for your phone, and already have it, then it may make sense. But if you are only an occasional data plan user, then trying to justify it by claiming it replaces sat radio would still leave you needing to justify throwing out another $15-25 per month.

    And that is also ignoring the fact that sat radio works pretty well everywhere. Data access on your phone only works were you have reception on your network. Not every community, even in the US, has good coverage for every provider.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  50. You know what else was commercial-free once? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cable TV. -Now- look at it.

    If you're happy paying for radio, go nuts. But don't expect the commercial-free ride to last forever.

    BTW, satellite radio providers are a completely different animal than the US auto industry, which provides thousands of jobs and makes trade goods and is kind of important to the economy. No way in hell is SiriusXM seeing a nickel of bailout money.

  51. Submitter is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "focus on getting Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB on every Internet-connected device on the market at very low prices"

    Why on earth would we need these pathetic excuses for entertainment on the internet? The internet is wayy better than Stern, Oprah, and NFL/MLB. The reason radio & tv is dying is because stern, oprah and NFL/MLB is the best it could do... and all these forms of entertainment are sad, boring useless wastes of bandwith.

    XM/Sirius dying is just another example of the internet routing around broken nodes.... This time broken by poor management underestimating peoples desire for entertainment which is actually entertaining.

  52. Choice was not a major downfall of SIRI-XM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sirius-XM has to compete with EVERYTHING, not just other forms of audio broadcasts like internet radio or over the air AM/FM radio."

    The problem with this little bit is it implies that you can only have one thing and not the other.

  53. Geez- what Tripe by gadlaw · · Score: 1

    That sounds like some rah rah fanboy BS. I can't happily run an iPod in the car, the internet doesn't travel well in the car, my cellphone doesn't have highspeed radio access and if it did I'd still have the same problems I have with the iPod - you can't navigate them in a car traveling down the highway. Sirius/XM is great - convenient access to news, weather, music and sports when I want it. I want Bluegrass music there it is, I want to listen to Jazz, there it is - on my local radio? No chance, it's rap and pop country and Rush Limbaugh railing away like Tokyo Rose. I press one button on my Sirius radio and I have the NFL channel and listen to actual people talking about sports instead of screaming ranting idiots like I'd get on a terrestrial station if I happened to be able to get it at all. My cell phone? I'm lucky when I can check my gmail account on it. The reasons for the financial difficulties of Sirius/XM don't have a thing to do with the intertubes or the whocaresiphone. Get over yourselves fanboys.

    --
    Enjoy your Karma, after all you earned it. Feel your Karma Joe, feel it burn.
    1. Re:Geez- what Tripe by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      If you care about the NFL and want to actually learn the game, the NFL channel on Sirius is remarkable. Pat Kirwan will teach you more about football in an hour than you'll learn in a lifetime of watching ESPN, Fox, and the rest of the broadcasting world.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    2. Re:Geez- what Tripe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sirius/XM is great - convenient access to news, weather, music and sports when I want it. I want Bluegrass music there it is, I want to listen to Jazz, there it is"

      My experience was much different. The news was good, but i can get BBC/NPR without sattelite, so whats the point in paying? As far as listening to jazz went, if you wanted to listen to the same playlist everyday it was okay (it would have been nice to be able to get some old-time jazz every once in a while tho) Likewise the blues channel didnt seem to have any music by artists who werent currently being promoted by their label (no old-timers again)
      And sports? well ive never been able to figure out why anyone would want to listen to some fathead describe a bunch millionaires chasing a ball around... I always thought entertainment should be in some way entertaining, but obviously mine is the minority view on that.

  54. Mobile devices on Sirius by rubypossum · · Score: 1

    As a huge fan of Sirius I fought with the ever present problem of never being able to listen without a Sirius receiver. When they came out with the Sirius Internet streaming I was ecstatic! I joyfully fired up my Nokia N95 and tried to go to Sirius.com. It does not work. A service I payed $15.00 a month for would not let me listen to the product. So I went through all the trouble of setting up Orb and uSirius and running a transcoding station at my home PC - just to listen on my mobile. But it just wasn't practical. I turned off my Sirius service. Everywhere. The minute those morons can get their act together and stream in a platform independent way I'll be back.

    --
    I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. - Hunter S. Thompson
  55. Re:The Internet will not solve the whole problem.. by chappel · · Score: 1

    My sentiments exactly. I get XM/Sirius radio as an add-on to the XM/WX weather service in my plane. I don't much care for the audio - the selection of songs is weak, the sound is extremely compressed, the DJs are tolerable - and it makes me want to punch someone that I still have to listen to adds on many of the stations, even though I'm paying to listen to them. I love that I get to listen to uninterrupted programming while covering 1000 miles, though.

    The real reason I subscribe is for the aviation weather package - it isn't cheap, but it's indispensable. I think it will eventually be run out of business by free ADS-B services, but for another 4-5 years at least it'll still be the way to go. I'm not sure what I'll do if the bankruptcy disturbs the weather programming.

    I dream of getting internet in the plane - current options I read about run in the $800,000 range.

  56. You get what's available by phorm · · Score: 1

    In the early days the cellular companies dishes out cheap semi-unlimited data plans for the early iPhone adopters. Nowadays the best I could get was $30 for a 1GB/month plan, or $25 for 500Mb. Better than my buddy, he gets all of 5MB for the sample price I pay for a gig!

  57. Legal internet offerings are hamstrung ... by WayneDV · · Score: 1

    .. by distribution rights.

    I'm from South Africa and I could at least make use of Sirius for great programming. I try Pandora and I get a message telling me that it's not available outside of the USA.

    1. Re:Legal internet offerings are hamstrung ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try live365.com instead. You can listen to that from any country..

  58. Yeah... by kuzb · · Score: 1

    Sirius XM has been eclipsed by something far cheaper and more convenient: the Internet. Load up Pandora or the Public Radio Tuner on your iPhone, and you've got access to a wider stream of music than you'll ever get through satellite.

    Please don't reference Pandora like it's available to everyone. It isn't. Thanks US government!

    --
    BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  59. Re:What carrier, what location, and what voice pla by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

    I have AT&T (iPhone) $30/mo. The AUP is surprisingly fair; IIRC it's no servers and no tethering. Neither is enforced, aside from NAT (for no servers). Tethering works fine anyway. I've been very happy about it; pulled about 5GB so far this month - about normal for me.

    --
    I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
  60. DirecTV radio vs reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a bunch of satellite radio channels as a side effect of my DirecTV service. But I rarely use it, because I have a DirecTV DVR.

    I can't leave the radio playing, particularly at night, because the DVR often has to change the channel to record something.

    They should modify the DVR to support radio: record the audio stream, and if the DVR automatically changes the tuner channel, loop the recorded audio until a DVR tuner is again available. (This idea is released to the public domain, and it is an obvious variation of the existing behavior which records the recent video stream.) Contracts with program sources might have to be modified, but some should be no problem (such as music channels which can assume random replays are similar to playing the omitted stuff and just leave royalty arrangements the same).

  61. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That just doesn't compare. Driving = Sirius, at work = Sirius, then Internet. I've fallen in love with Sirius - I love the no commercial / uncensored stations I listen to. I get to drive a demo at work and switch cars every couple of months or so. In the past few years of that I've become hooked on Sirius (they give you a free year, and all the vehicles that come with it are already activated - I think it's a great way to get someone hooked) I've had three people buy a Sirius radio and subscription for themselves just because it's so great.

    1. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah that's another thing. Clearchannel!!! I sometimes get a demo without Sirius and it's mind numbing. I usually end up listening to the locally run stations or classical or something.

      That just doesn't compare. Driving = Sirius, at work = Sirius, then Internet. I've fallen in love with Sirius - I love the no commercial / uncensored stations I listen to. I get to drive a demo at work and switch cars every couple of months or so. In the past few years of that I've become hooked on Sirius (they give you a free year, and all the vehicles that come with it are already activated - I think it's a great way to get someone hooked) I've had three people buy a Sirius radio and subscription for themselves just because it's so great.

  62. Almost, but not quite by PinchDuck · · Score: 1

    I've got an Inno and an MP3 Player. I use my Inno far more often. I like the fact that I hear new music and original programming on my radio. So far, the humans are doing a better job than the algorithms of picking the music I like. I also get the NFL, college football, goofy shows like Coast to Coast AM, and several comedy stations. Most, but not all, of this is available on the internet, but at a seriously reduced convenience. It is unsafe to change radio streaming websites while driving on your phone. It is easy and much safer to hit one of my radio station presets. While the internet may kill Sat Rad, I hope they can make it through their current mess to survive and thrive. Secondly, even if XM Sirius goes away, I suspect that someone would pick up the satellite network and try to make a go of it with subscribers like myself. They are down, but I wouldn't write them off yet, and they certainly are not dead. Proof? I'm listening to my radio right now and it still works.

  63. The Sirius-XM merger killed it for me by Change · · Score: 1

    I had XM radio for several months, and liked it quite a bit. Then Sirius and XM started working on their merge, and XM ditched several channels in favor of Sirius programming. The channels I listened to on XM had real DJs, playing music that I liked about 95% of the time. Afterwards, all the channels I listened to were gone and had been replaced with automated playlist channels playing music I liked about 5% of the time. Whoever was building those playlists had nowhere near the ability to tie together a long stream of songs, it does take some skill and knowledge of the music to be able to make a cohesive playlist. I tried for about a month to like the new format, but I just couldn't get into it and cancelled my subscription. For me, it was Sirius's programming that killed XM.

  64. Re:Radio? What's that?? by hakey · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am an NPR junky. The problem is that local NPR stations generally don't transmit very far. I recently moved to an area that only gets one station, and its programming is mediocre with news and talk for only part of the day and music all evening and night. So I got an XM radio so that I could listen to NPR. XM provides 24/7 BBC world service, world radio network, and 3 public radio channels. And I can get it reliably at home and on the road no matter where I am in the country. No other broadcast radio or internet phone service can match that. So for me satellite radio is definitely worth it.

  65. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    check out Slacker radio, I bought there small G2 player, it rocks.

  66. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Americans prefer most according to most recent studies...reading."

    I agree for the most part. But I see changing trend in my house. The Internet is taking on a form of our music players, news papers, books(eBooks), news channels...pretty much all forms of information.

    Oh yeah, especially with the launch of HULU commercials on TV now...So,TV too!

    In my job as a network engineer, sometimes I can't do without Google or experts exchange. As applications are upgraded and changed...BUGS are born!

    I do agree with the reading piece though. Slashdot and Lifehacker are my first stops everyday on the Internet to read-up on what's going-on with technology.

    A text-less Internet would pretty much suck!

  67. What about the people in Northern Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and other remote regions. I only can pick up FM radio when I go to a large city and we only have two of those in Alberta. When I sometimes travel 700 -800 KM a day and MP3 player doesn't hold enough content and what about the comedy channels couldn't live without them. The Bruce Springstein channel sucks though I mean come on who doesn't whant Bruce 24/7.

  68. This article is about satellite radio, not FM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course it is cheaper to use an existing FM radio than to buy a satellite radio tuner and subscription for service. This article is about the poor value of the satellite radio and subscription versus an appropriate "internet radio" and "internet subscriptions" (knowing that you may pay some ISP fees and some content fees for certain types of non-free content).

    The radio front is also starting to see expansion of HD-Radio which has as its main feature a free digital broadcast. Rather than being "high def" or anything, HD-Radio is actually about FM quality or worse due to aggressive audio compression. However it crams more audio streams into the FM band and therefore allows sub-channels just like OTA HD television has crammed multiple sub-channels where there was once a single analog channel. So the urban markets are seeing an expansion of special programming, such as additional all-talk, all-music, all-sports channels from the same broadcaster who previously had a single channel in the market. This may threaten satellite radio the same way ATSC is threatening cable in urban markets.

    All of these things together will kill satellite radio as a market. The majority of listeners (in highly populated areas) will be satisfied with a combination of FM radio, HD radio, and Internet-based audio. There won't be enough corner cases left to support the satellite radio business.

  69. It's just too expensive! by cyn1c77 · · Score: 1

    I think that Sirius/XM just priced themselves out of their own market. Satellite radio is $13/month. While not as good for dedicated radio listening, a cell phone data plan is $30/month and provides a hell of a lot more functionality in general. I maintain that all of their problems would be solved if they charged $5/month and put gags on their stupid DJs.

  70. Re:The Internet will not solve the whole problem.. by Jay+Maynard · · Score: 1

    Indeed. I'd love to get Internet in my airplane, but whatever comes along to provide that service will be big, heavy, bulky, and very, very expensive for the first several years.

    I don't expect ADS-B datalink weather to be practical for the small airplane owner with nationwide coverage for at least another decade.

    I consider the XM weather essential for long-distance cross-country flights (more than one 300 nm leg), to the point I'd have to seriously reconsider a trip if it broke. Being able to have current weather along my route of flight quickly available and presented graphically, without having to get someone to read it to me, is a major enhancement to aviation safety.

    I'm not that fond of the changes they made to XM 46 and XM 49 after the merger, but it's still mainly something to listen to in between ATC transmissions anyway, so I'm not going to argue that loudly. My favorite channel for a long car trip, Old Time Radio (XM 164/Sirius 118 after the merger), isn't practical for listening in the airplane, since ATC overrides the program audio, and they talk too much. :-)

    --
    Disinfect the GNU General Public Virus!
  71. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Rukie · · Score: 1

    Contracts? What Contracts? I never signed anything with Sirius.

    --
    Support the source, Open Source! An entire site developed with OSS
  72. Too bad for you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The alternatives are attractive in the urban, highly populated markets. And without their dense "subscription subsidies" for your rural/aviator use case, satellite radio as a market will have to turn itself into a cost structure like Iridium satellite phones. Think dollars per minute, rather than dollars per month.

    The most rational option for the nation would have been to deploy a satellite data service which could be used from mobile devices to roam where the fixed infrastructure did not reach. Then run the same services (telecom, entertainment, emergency comms) over the whole combined fabric, agnostic to which transport they are using at any one location. Unfortunately, the capitalist market model doesn't encourage such broad strategic planning on its own. It would need legislative funding to launch such a grand scheme.

    1. Re:Too bad for you... by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      "satellite radio as a market will have to turn itself into a cost structure like Iridium satellite phones. Think dollars per minute, rather than dollars per month"

      Well, no. Satellite TV is a much closer model; the Iridium is expensive, but it's providing 2-way communication from any spot on earth at pretty much any time. Satellite Radio is one-way, providing a footprint over North America. TV provides that kind of footprint for 30-40 bucks a month for "unlimited viewing".

      Look at Muzak (http://www.domyweb.net/music.htm). Muzak provides commercial music, with all BMI/ASCAP/Performance fees for ~$80/month. I'm not sure why we'd expect satellite radio to cost dollars per minute.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  73. Re:How about this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was that (it's been taken down) the video of a kid torturing a cat in a shower stall?

    Really sick.

    I would be willing to contribute to any reward fund that has been set up for the capture and conviction of the people involved in that video. I'm sure that they have at least one "friend" who would be willing to ratt them out for a few grand.

    Get these kids some help before they turn into the next serial killers.

  74. Re:How about this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually in most states, torturing animals IS illegal, and if the culprits can be caught, they can ( and damned well should )
    get a dose of life behind bars.

    I hate to say this, but there are some people who are so sick
    they are beyond help. If you don't understand this, you don't know
    much about the worst humanity has to offer.

  75. Re:How about this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I hate to say this, but there are some people who are so sick
    they are beyond help. If you don't understand this, you don't know
    much about the worst humanity has to offer.

    Oh, I'm more than willing to admit that locking them up may be the only "help" that will work.

  76. Satellite Radio where there are no other signals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My family owns a yacht and the best accesory we have purchased for it has been a satellite radio. This way we don't have to fuzz about changing CDs or ipods. We can pick a station and just leave it there and keep the music coming. This is the only option besides satellite TV (which we don't want) that we can get in the middle of the sea. This is an unexploited market for satellite radio. I'm sad that it might stop working now that the companies are going bankrupt.

  77. where do you get that? by zogger · · Score: 2, Informative

    People out in the sticks don't have gadgets? Are you for real? It's exactly the same on a per capita basis near as I have ever seen. Probably much higher once you get into tools and mechanical things, but for electronics, about the same. We don't have as good broadband plans, that's about it for lack, everything else is the same. I work on a farm, it is definitely in the sticks, deer and turkeys around, etc, we can target shoot on the property no problem, including long range rifle, we heat with wood,(establishing official sticks bona fides there) but just in this room I am sitting in are half a dozen computers, two active cellphones and several more in the drawer, two TVs, one with the converter for digital (I was just playing with it, switched antennas and went from 4 to 9 channels..)(although most people have sat dishes), about a dozen radios including HAM and shortwave gear, etc, we have various music players, etc and we are some of the poorer folks around here! Heck, I pulled a vid card and 80 gig drive out of the damn dumpster nearby, just three days ago.

    Rule of thumb: when you see every other guy driving 40 grand pickups with ten grand worth of customization, they ain't hurting for the scratch to by cheap iPhones and such like gadgets.

    Really man, get out, meet some folks in the country, it isn't 1950s andy of mayberry all over with technology in some sort of locked time warp. Broadband, that's it, no cable or anything, and wireless doesn't cut the mustard yet here..yet, but I am sure it will eventually penetrate to us yokels. Hopefully, when they get done dicking around with the TV digital switchover the freed up spectrum might lead to that broadband problem being fixed as well. Ya, have to drive pretty far to a starbucks..whoopedy zing.

    1. Re:where do you get that? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      The lack of a market for doodads away from major cities has nothing to do with the per-capita income, is has to do with the volumetric density of people. There simply are not enough people per square mile for anyone except the census takers to really care a huge amount about. That's why broadband is hard to come by away from the cities. Those that care move closer to a city. Those that don't live without. By and large its a decent system...

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
  78. The other problem with XM/Sirius' service by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

    The compression rate is way too high. Music is all but unlistenable in a non-automobile environment. I had a trial XM radio hooked up to my home stereo. I could not listen to the music for more than ten or fifteen minutes at a time.

  79. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > the form of entertainment that Americans prefer most
    > according to most recent studies...reading.

    I'd like to see the source for that. It doesn't match
    my experience of people at all.

    > Sirius-XM has to compete with EVERYTHING, not just other
    > forms of audio broadcasts like internet radio or over the
    > air AM/FM radio. Every activity you do other than listen
    > to Sirius-XM is in direct competition with Sirius-XM

    Where do you get this? The people I know who have satellite
    radio use it just like regular radio. Sometimes they listen
    to it for its own sake, sometimes it's on as background.

    I've always used radio at the same time as doing something
    else, not instead of doing something else.

    > And once you leave your car, Sirius-XM offers almost nothing
    > that is worth paying a monthly fee for, unless you crave their
    > exclusive talk radio content like Howard Stern.

    Bull. If you use it for music, it's worth the fee just to
    have music *with no commercials*. Just like cable TV was
    originally worth the price over free TV because of no commercials.

    Internet radio is not a practical option for everyone. A lot
    of those people can use satellite radio, though.

  80. 3G/2G Cross Country Driving by meehawl · · Score: 1

    I drove NY->Cali last year and used a 3G Sprint phone (HTC Titan) as a music player, hooked up to the line-in on the mp3 player.

    I used mainly Resco Radio (Windows Mobile software that aggregates a lot of streaming radio stations) and Last.FM as music sources. It worked okay. Even in the middle of 2G-only areas, I was able to select the lowest bandwidth streamers and still get acceptable playback. At no point did I feel a need for satellite. So, yes, even though Farhad Manjoo's articles are usually epic, pointless tales of obviousness, in this instance he's right. Satellite radio is a technology whose chance for mass market penetration passed some time ago. It is the steam-powered buggy whip of digital audio.

    As a bonus I was able to tether my phone to my laptop for Internet, and do video conferencing along the way. All this, plus voice, for $30/month. Sprint rules.

    --

    Da Blog
  81. Wait until you're actually a parent by ClosedSource · · Score: 2, Informative

    You'll be doing all kinds of stuff you said you wouldn't do.

    1. Re:Wait until you're actually a parent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll be doing all kinds of stuff you said you wouldn't do.

      Yes and no. I am a parent and one of the things I'm trying to impress on my kid is actually being there in the experience not listening to headphones or watching a dvd (this goes hand in hand with limiting TV to prescreened stuff on TiVo and dvd and not just having it on all the time and discussing what we read). Sometimes, it's excruciating for all of us but he's learning to be in his own head and carry on a conversation in a manner ahead of many of his age.

  82. Why not some 'free' commerical channels then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the idea of Satellite Radio, especially in my next of the north. But I am cheap... really cheap. I do not want to spend any money on a Radio... I can burn my songs and 'Pod Casts' to my iPod for free. I would get a Satellite Radio (or a device (cell phone/iPod) with it built in) if I did not have have that stupid monthly expense. They could and should offer a small selection of commercial paid for stations for free. If I want to listen to the NFL games I could by the game I like; much like Pay Pre-View. Everyone is typically cheap by nature and the current economic times are only making people more cheap or shall we say frugal. So any new business model must take into account these increasing frugal customer base.

  83. Why I won't re-up my subscription to SiriusXM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "Everything" package that I purchased does not allow me to listen to EVERYTHING. I have to pay extra money if I want to listen to EVERYTHING, even though I already paid good money to have the "Everything" package for three years. Everything used to mean everything, but now it only means everything that I was getting at the time I subscribed, not everything that is currently available at any point during the life of my subscription. Semantics and double-talk. This, only 1.5 years into my subscription.

    Question: What is the name of the package that I purchased?
    Answer: The Everything package.
    Question: Why can't I listen to all of the channels that I see listed?
    Answer: Because you have the Everything package which only allows you to listen to some of the channels. Basically you only get to listen to the channels that were available at the time you subscribed.
    Befuddled Reply: Oh. My mistake. I thought I was buying the EVERYTHING Everything package. I didn't realize that you would be changing the definition of Everything.

    Oh... ...don't even get me started talking about the online service which is going to be cut off in the near future unless you want to pay some other premium price.

  84. is satellite radio better than free radio? by wiredog · · Score: 1

    Yes. Absolutely. At least for music. Here in DC the commercial stations seem to be 50% commercials. Maybe more. XM is commercial free. So I spend $15/month or so to NOT listen to commercials.

    Also, satellite is receivable all the way from DC to Ocean City. Can't listen to DC101 much beyond the Bay Bridge. Assuming I'd want to.

  85. Solution by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

    Stop living so far away from where you work. it's not natural.

    1. Re:Solution by tepples · · Score: 1

      Stop living so far away from where you work. it's not natural.

      The rent is so much cheaper that I could barely care less whether it's "natural".

    2. Re:Solution by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      Sounds like it's time to find a new job then.

  86. Why I canceled my XM subscription by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was an XM subscriber. Had been for about 2.5-3 years. Then, XM and Sirus merged. The day after the merger, the one station I listened to in my car most was replaced with another that claimed to offer mostly the same mix of music. However, the new station also added the additional "feature" of talking DJ's.

    That right there was enough for me. They (XM) were already battling the need to be $13/month better than my iPod (bought and paid for). As long as my music station had no talking DJ's, I was (mostly) ok with the expense. But the insertion of talking DJ's was just too much. If I wanted to hear DJ's talk, I don't even need an XM receiver. I can simply tune to free terrestial radio during the morning or evening drive time, and I can hear all the talking DJ's I want (that's all they do anymore is talk talk talk during the morning and evening drive time). In fact, the talking DJ's on free terrestial radio is why I went to XM in the first place. So when they added talking DJ's, they made their channels no better than the free terrestial radio.

    So now, my iPod is providing my commerical free, and DJ free, radio entertainment in my car, and is not costing me an additional $13/month to do so. The XM receiver has been removed, and will not be going back.

  87. Re:Radio? What's that?? by AdamHaun · · Score: 1

    How do they make you pay a monthly fee for broadcast reception, anyway? What's to keep you from just finding a used receiver and listening all you want?

    --
    Visit the
  88. iPhones in Montana by geek_in_mt · · Score: 1

    Why don't you bring your iPhone here to Montana and drive around the state with me. How much coverage will it get? How much will you pay in roaming fees since AT&T has no coverage in Montana? Bring every smartphone from every wireless company and you still won't have sufficient coverage. As we take a drive that's perfectly normal for Montana, we will pass through multiple broadcast markets. Do you want to spend the whole drive surfing the AM/FM dial? What about the places where there's no AM/FM? What will you do then? Maybe we could mount a satellite dish on my car and find some way to keep it from blowing off the car and stay aimed at the satellite while driving at 80mph. Then we could crank up any Internet radio on my laptop, plugged into an inverter, plugged into my cigarette lighter.... Or, maybe we could just use my satellite radio.

  89. Re:Radio? What's that?? by TellarHK · · Score: 1

    Initially, yes, the radios were huge. My Delphi SkyFi was giant, as is the SkyFi 2 (Complete with FCC violating FM transmitter, woo!) I replaced it with.

    Indoor reception is spotty, yeah. It's a satellite. Stick it in a southern window and it'll usually work unless you have obstructions.

    Contracts? I never encountered a contract in relation to XM, so I don't know what you're on about here. You buy a radio, you subscribe, cancel whenever. Sirius might have been different, but I didn't think so.

    Paying for each radio wasn't a big deal before, since the rates were lower than today.

    The biggest problem with satellite now, is that so many of the complaints you have about regular radio finally got pulled in.

    The advertising sucks and feels designed for morons, and there -are- only about a dozen different ads you'll hear in the space of a day's listening on some channels. The sound quality, in my opinion anyhow, did drop with the Sirius merger. The Sirius DJ's are serious "weak sauce" with few exceptions (Nina Blackwood's good on the 80's, and Cain(?) on Octane isn't bad) though the XM DJ's always seemed to be a lot better quality. (I wouldn't have even accepted three free months if they weren't keeping Grant Random and Bodhi around)

    But what annoys the hell out of me, is that they talk over the songs now. Yesterday, I was listening to Alice Cooper's "Hey, Stupid" and the last moment of the song got cut off mid-phrase. When I'm trying to listen to a song and get into the groove, that pisses me -right- off. So it goes right up there with your "Idiotic DJ's" complaint.

  90. Again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why any one would pay to listen to music just because it comes from a satellite. Long life last.fm on a g1 and an aux jack in my stereo

  91. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the merger had a big part to play in the downfall as well. In addition to XM's debt burdon, the merger was delayed much longer than anticipated due to bureaucratic issues over speculative anti competitive arguments pushed through government channels by terrestrial radio lobbying initiatives. This cost the satellite companies more than they really were able to afford in legal and lobbying costs of their own. Not only that but they failed to realize the cost savings quickly enough to make a financial impact because they operated as separate companies for longer than planned.

  92. Ron and Fez by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron and Fez (noon to three, xm202, sirius 198) is the reason to have satellite radio.

  93. Sirius is killing satellite radio by jageryager · · Score: 1

    In my opinion Sirius is killing satellite Radio. I've been an avid listener of XM for 4 years or so. I liked the country stations 10 - 13, 16, 17. I really enjoyed the "Visiting with the Legends" shows with Bill Anderson, and also the Outlaw America shows that used to air live during my commute time. Outlaw America had a call-in line that took requests. These shows are now gone. They have an "Outlaw Country" channel that very seldom plays music of the outlaw country genre. They have a hand full of new D.J.s most of which are annoying. Some are too annoying for me. ( Mojo Nixon _really_ _is_ a bugar eating moron. )

    I have no idea how they are doing for other kinds of music, but they've totally screwed up the stuff I like. My yearly subscription ends in April. I plan to cancel then.

    --
    "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety"-B.Franklin
  94. last.fm by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

    At work, where i do not have my gigabytes of mp3's i use last.fm to maintain my sanity, because there's no decent radio station in Belgium, well, none if you're not into the 50cents, Britneys and other crap. Last.fm however, does provide excellent service, they have a community, a concert agenda, wiki pages about the bands & artists, loads & loads of small unknown bands just waiting to be discovered... I love it!

  95. commercials by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    If they start blasting commercials like they do on "free" radio, I'll be one of the first to cancel.

  96. tubes by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    Sounds like you are my age....will you agree that those old tube stereos had a certain charm about them? My first "aftermarket" car thingy was an old pioneer underdash 8 track stereo, with a WHOPPING 4 watts per channel fed into two 8x9 coaxial speakers.

    1. Re:tubes by SkyDude · · Score: 1
      The tube amps may have held a charm for some but I'm not in that camp. I always preferred "solid state" electronics. Ran cooler and quieter. But I know many believe tubes created a warmer more real sound.

      The 8 track is exactly why iPods and the like are so much better when it comes to playing what you want to hear. Aside from the sonic qualities of digital, the endless tape loop of the 8 track sucked, but at that time, your choice was that or AM radio. How far we've come.

      During the late 70s and half of the 80s I was a club and mobile DJ. Aside from earning a nice part time living, I developed a hell of a strong back. The one thing I would have traded my right nut and half my left one for was to do away with moving 500 lbs of records to gigs. I can't tell you how many flights of stairs I had to drag those suckers up, in function halls that didn't have an elevator!

      At that time I couldn't have imagined 10,000 songs would one day be capable of being carried in your back pocket. I'm glad it's happened. As one guy pointed out the iPod can be thought of as a storage device and indeed, that's the greatest strength of these little devices. My original comment was that when it comes to sound reproduction, MP3 players or phones in general are no better than what was here 30+ years ago.

      --
      == First cross river, then insult alligator.
  97. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DRM. The receiver has a serial number and receives updates from the network about whether you're paying. Presumably there's a black market in hacked receivers, much like satellite TV smartcard updates.

  98. Point taken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, I was assuming Iridium like costs and features (two-way comms) so that the same suite of apps that work on current Internet and mobile platforms would be able to migrate to the satellite comms when out of range of base stations. This requires two-way comms to support the existing app suite. The problem with this use case is that you by definition don't have an alternate path for uplink traffic, e.g. you cannot use the traditional satellite ISP model which uses landline modem for uplink and multiplexing of the broadcast for all the customers' downlink streams.

    When I was living overseas I bought a local metered voice and flat-rate GPRS data plan for my GSM phone and used it as my only Internet service for a couple of years. It cost me about $30 US/month for the data service and a very cheap per-minute voice cost on top of that, and by the time I was finished, it was available as a pre-paid service option as well. (No contract, just dial a code to debit one day or one week's worth of flat-rate data fees from the account balance). Admittedly, I also used a very affordable long-distance international calling card which let me use their VOIP system terminated in regular phone service on both ends. My per-minute cost to dial the calling card via mobile phone and the card's per-minute cost for trans-oceanic calling added up to less than the usual bulk per-minute cost of a US mobile phone placing a domestic call. For relevance to this story, I even used Internet radio over my tethered GPRS Internet link, listening to US sourced streams while I was in a poor country in Asia.

    I would consider a decent baseline Internet connection to be my first expenditure in any living environment, followed by mobile phone voice minutes, then a better landline ISP link. After that would be dead-tree periodicals and only then would I consider a luxury medium like satellite or cable radio/TV.

    I think I may be ahead of my time at my age (34) but it seems like the younger generations are even more adapted to the new media than me. I really question the long-term viability of for-fee broadcasts, when the market is replaced with new people who expect two-way comms in everything.

  99. Nope, you are just wrong by zogger · · Score: 1

    I'm really not trying to flame you, just inform. They sell all the same gadget stuff out here you can get probably, and fed ex goes everywhere. We have all the big chain stores, all the various *marts, various whitebox computer shops, office depots, radio hovels, fast food to gourmet restaurants, etc, just a bit further drive, but they are here, along with all the gadgets you could sling a yagi at. In fact, like I said, we probably have *more* because you can get all the gadgets plus all the cool mechanical gadgets and stuff, from half a million dollar a whack crawlers and trackhoes down to you name itm low end chainsaws, let alone your regular assortment of cars, trucks, motorcycles, ATVs, RVs whatever, boats, all that stuff..

    You want a giant plasma TV, you can get it, a fancy stereo home theater rig, you can get it. Home automation, available. The *only* thing we lack is broadband down the last little roads, that's it, but a lot of folks do have broadband, it just isn't quite everywhere yet. If you *really* need it, there's satellite broadband and whatever the cell phone guys have, it is just spendy. We lack cheap DSL and cable down the last mile here and there, but probably 2/3rds of the county I am in can get one or the other or both already, and wireless is creeping in here and there, new towers going up just for it, in fact one of the wireless isps locally is getting some new gear this week coming up and they are going to try and shoot me a better signal, so then I can get broadband that way if the new gear works..

    Where's there's money, retail is there, dense urban areas or over in flyover country in the little towns. It doesn't go from highrises and subways to poof wilderness in other words, there's a LOT of inbetween areas that sill have all the amenities.

    The US really has four basic zone types, ultra urban, suburban (which is way more urban than rural), farm-rural like here where I am (a vast amount of turf in this nation), then way the heck out in the boonies (again a huge amount) where you need to fly in or take a horse or something. Regular "farm rural" covers a lot of ground, and we got all the same stuff you got in the much larger cities, with plenty of merchants to take your cash.

    The scenery can change a lot within a few miles, drive 15 or so minutes one way, national forests, etc, good hunting and fishing and hiking, etc, 15 minutes another way, walmart and banks and various stores and so on in town. There's way more "diversity" here as to human cultural lifestyles and living situations than in any big city I ever saw within reasonablly short travel distance, mansions to townhouses to apartments to cheap trailers to rambling ranches that are *real* ranches, and as to social multiculturalism, there's folks from all over live around here, up the street from me some Vietnamese folks have a farm, we get some Russian boys (BIG dudes) come help on the farm here sometimes, the first store up the road from me is run by a family from Pakistan, and so many hispanic folks they have a lot of their own stores now with all the signs in Spanish.

    Plenty of gadgets, with just the right mix and size of city without being stifling and cut off from some real nature, lots of land and trees and creeks and lakes and "green" around.

    Like I said, a starbucks is more of a drive for me, like a half an hour or so if I lead foot it, but frankly, a waffle house or huddle house coffee is just as good, loads cheaper, and tons of those places around here have free wifi now as well.

    In other words, not bad at all, and 1/3rd to 1/2 the living costs say from living in or very near metro Atlanta, last really big city I lived in. We have a freezer packed with our own grass fed beef and free range chicken, and a fridge full of fresh produce (more in the summer of course, but we do get some stuff year round and have a greenhouse as well) from our garden and shelves full of stuff we canned, all organic. Not sure what that costs in the expensive

  100. How they lost this subscriber by grotgrot · · Score: 1

    I was paying them $240 a year for two subscriptions and am now paying them $11 for one subscription which won't be renewed when it runs out.

    A car antenna cracked and they only sell replacements for exorbitant prices, so they fixed the issue by issuing a new radio (which includes antenna) and paying $80 towards installation. Their systems cancelled an account instead of noticing that a credit card expiry date had been updated to be current. They removed the station I listened to the most and explained that "customers like me" wanted that. They kept charging the wrong amount (too little) in this mess and on cancellation refunded the wrong amount (too much). This is despite pointing that out to them.

    But it was most noticeable to me that they hate their customers so much they pay (presumably the lowest bidder) in another country to talk to them. (Of course that country doesn't have Sirius or XM service so the customer service reps have no experience of using the product in any way.)

  101. Answer to why satellite radio failed by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    And it's right in your post:

    Thousands of truckers and commuters rely on Satellite for their source of entertainment and news.

    Emphasis mine, of course, on the numbers involved. There just isn't a big enough market. Even in a society where commuting via car is standard, satellite can't muster enough subscribers to provide a viable business model. Between licensing of content (sports, stern, and statutory fees) and the cost of satellite broadcasts, you need a solid host of millions of paying customers. Thing is, most of the US can get what they want out of traditional broadcast services, or from their personal collections (ipods). Satellite TV is viable because it has a large installed base that can only get the majority of content from a for-pay source, and the competition is Cable TV (most companies should be so lucky as to have such an incompetent rival).

    I'll grant you that satellite radio is cool - my wife has XM. There are a couple of problems, though. They've created a model of one receiver, one subscription, so if you have two cars you need two subscriptions, or a tuner module you have to physically move. For SatTV and Cable, it's an extra 10% a month for each extra TV. In doing so, they also required bypassing your car tuner if you want to take your unit between vehicles, or you'd have to buy a separate, 100% cost subscription for each vehicle. And up until recently, you couldn't have a portable device the size of a personal audio player. Now, there are practical reception / link margin reasons for this, but you can't discuss that with consumers - all they know is that you have no portable device.

    To put this kind of endeavor together, you'd have to generate a _lot_ of subscriptions, and they just can't do it. I'll probably drop this year - I've already removed XM from my wife's car when we got the new head unit that does DVDs. Thee only useful way to keep it would have been to spend (another) $200 to have a hardwired receiver, but then she couldn't have XM at work. Now it's just in a radio in her office. For $55/yr, it's not a huge deal, especially since I can also tune it in from time to time on my PC. Now they're going to drop the PC version (unless you pay more), and our promo is up in March. I'm not paying $150/yr. Especially now that Pandora makes a much better station (or, rather, I make a better one on Pandora). Enough interstates have good cell service that I can get a lot of XM-like stuff on my cell phone, too.

    There is a place for satellite radio, but it's market size just isn't large enough to sustain it. Thousands of people just don't have the buying power.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  102. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    For a week and a half I can find either a book on tape/CD or my personal collection.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  103. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    Wow, that's the first time I've heard mention of the use of a Molniya orbit in more than a decade. I didn't know it was even used commercially for US coverage.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  104. Good accessory to the car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awesome! Now I have a defunct satellite radio service to go with my defunct auto service. If OnStar goes belly-up, it will be the trifecta!

  105. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Neilsen doesn't do radio surveys. Neilsen does TV.

  106. Author makes glaring errors of fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The number of basic errors of fact in this story is amazing.

    The $175M debt is due this Tuesday, 2/17 - not end of month.

    While satrad has some content gems, to describe it as "the world's best radio programming" is buying into Sirius' marketing hype. Whatever quality existed began to be eviscerated years ago by management and programmers who seem intent on creating a pay FM service, complete with tiny play lists, mindless DJs and nothing but the most familiar, mainstream formats.

    As has been pointed out earlier, Sirius has three birds and XM four (two active, two older as backups), not "seven" - and only XM's are geosynchronous.

    The company does not have 19M subscribers. It has 19M active radios. Some customers have multiple radios and some have both XM and Sirius accounts. The 19M figure also includes unsold cars sitting on dealer lots to which no humans listen, a result of Sirius's dubious practice of including such radios in its subscription total. Further, in November the company lost subscribers who were angered at the scorched earth channel slashing that contradicted CEO Mel Karmazin's pledges to Congress and the press that content choice would be maintained.

    Lastly, online subscriptions are available for less than $13 a month. XM's rate is $7.99 (xmradio.com/shop/subscriptions.xmc#). And the company has not "recently started charging $3 a month" for online listening. That increase does not become effective until March 11.

    More research and fact-checking, please. And less attitude.

  107. GTFO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > How many cars have internet service?

    Most posts on the topic rail against the lack of universal 3g coverage: part yourselves on the back---you are spot on!

    You know what I want to hear? ONE PANDORA-3G PHONE USER DECLARATIVELY STATE: I DRIVE 80 MILES AN HOUR ON $METROPOLIS AND THE FREAKING EXPERIENCE RATES A PASS, HERE'S WHY. XYZ123!

    Do everyone a favor Pandora-3g-user-dude, quantify!!! Whenever sat vs. Net radio rears its head we always read the Pandora-type blissful testimonials. In this thread not one 5-score post describes other than in passing how Pandora/3g/65+mph Just WorksTM. Everyopne else is saying, BS it does not.

    Anyhow. Quit your whining and start your pining! Net radio ready automobile stereos are here in the immediate future. Yea, yea, they depend on 3g/bluetooth but the freaking interface is integrated to the screen (Blaupunkt's miRoamer-powered TravelPilot New Jersey 600i internet car stereo." Double DIN, single DIN Hamburg).

    Here's how I see it. 3g is sparse, but the market^W^Wme/you/they are/am ready for options, and the tech is here. Sure the monopolist, obstructionist carriers can't see an opportunity staring them in the face, but we have worldwide works projects en route, in the billions (1.000 millions). The USA passed stimulus package has broadband improvement provisions, a President that is aware of alternatives routes other that SOP for telecommunication.

    So there were cds and slowly players were bought. So there were an mp3s and less slowly players were bought. So there were dvds and players were much less slowly bought. So there were smart phones, and then there were really smart phones that could play mp3, cd, dvd, game, web, app content! Velocity, momentum, desire is here majorly. Now I hear there's this depression type thing going on, I hear it's globally sucky, but, people will die, get sick, need to eat, be clothed. Shelter themselves. And they want better. That's apparent.

    I think it's a chicken thing. I am crowing, now gimme the egg dangit!!! Multiply that sentiment by a thousand, exponent it mildly, compound it by the make jobs, make tech, make green, make hay circumstances and ubiquitous 3g in less than a handful of years is not far fetched.

    Oh. Check out Blaupunkt's Internet radio car units:

    http://www.engadget.com/2009/01/13/blaupunkt-shows-off-miroamer-powered-internet-car-radios/
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/15/automobiles/15WEBCAR.html

    robie

  108. nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Satellite works in hickville.

    Pandora does not.

    Hell, try just calling.

  109. Can we really blame smart phones? by lee317 · · Score: 1

    While the iPhone and other smart phones could spell trouble in the future is it really what is killing the current market for sat. radio? I don't think so. Yes some folks do use Pandora or other services on their phones in the car, but the problems TODAY for Sirius are more likely due to the economic climate and bad business decisions. However, if the company survives this trial it may not be long (2-3 years) before cell data coverage is ubiquitous enough to put a real dent in business.

  110. Get. The Fuck. Outta here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the world's best radio programming for just a small monthly fee

    Absolute fucking bollocks. The world's best radio programming is available for free from Three Motherfucking Triple R, you stupid bitches!

  111. Re:Radio? What's that?? by markdavis · · Score: 1

    Oh, you are right, I just looked at the packet- it is "Arbitron"

  112. Re:Radio? What's that?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most all of you are twits! You expect a service to provide service without a REALISTIC income stream? They can't sell the product at a price that helps offset their costs. They can't sell advertising to cover their costs because it annoys you.

    I am so tired of all of you "everything should be free & just how I want it" losers on slashdot. It is like slashdot has become your little hideout from the rest of the REAL world.

    Look, satellite radios really aren't as cheap to manufacture as your typical $25 mp3 player. The infrastructure costs for satellite radio are higher than ANY radio station either terrestrial or internet based. They offer many channels without commercials. They know full well that most people wouldn't pay the cost to have truly commercial free radio via satellite so they created a compromise. Personally, I feel that if you do more than drive around 1 small area, that satellite radio is a great product at a fairly reasonable price. Would I like it a bit cheaper? Sure. But, they do have to make money. I drive a lot as a result of part of my business and I would feel as if I were being tortured if I had to listen to the local radio stations in many of the small towns I service.

    In all, it comes down to you "open-source" / "pirate" twits that think paying for anything is below them having your own little skewed view of the world and collectively hiding out on slashdot. It causes you to believe that the rest of the world shares your beliefs. The reality is that it does not.

    BTW, for the "smart guys" that claim streamed audio over 3G data... You do realize that most plans are capped at 5GB and the provider has the right to cancel the contract at any time for pretty much any reason?

  113. Radio, Whats that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As usual, all of the comments for iPhone, etc. assume that everyone has coverage that includes them. Try living in an area that does not have cell phone coverage, or WAN wireless. Northern Ontario for example or anything in the far North where most communications are handled by satellite.

  114. Did some Apple fanboi just discover ... by slashdotlurker · · Score: 1

    ... shoutcast ?

    Pandora is a crippled app that does not even support the full power of shoutcast, which has been around for years.

  115. Re:What carrier, what location, and what voice pla by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

    just fwiw: a co worker of mine has actually endeavored to use as much Edge/3G bandwidth as he can via streaming to his iPhone (several gigabytes at last mention) and so far ATT hasn't batted an eyelash

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  116. The net is NOT a replacement for satellite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife picked me up a 30 dollar satellite radio for my car a year and a half ago. I pay 12 dollars a month for my sub and that includes 56k net streaming for free (one of the reasons I can tell they are in trouble is that they are dropping this option unless you resub for a year or so).

    Now tell me, how if the heck do you think a iPhone with a data plan compares? I'd have to buy an expensive phone (100s of dollars), switch cell carriers (may or may not be free or even possible), and pay for a data plan (which I would not otherwise use in any way that would justify the cost).

    I know we're all nerds and have kicking, custom built PCs, but even among our crowd not everyone owns an expensive phone with a data plan to say nothing of the general population. Not only that, I use my radio in my car, and I know I'd get far more transmission problems over my phone in many locations than I do with my Sat signal. Yeah, it doesn't work in parking garages, but my cell reception becomes pretty shoddy in the same locations as well.

    Now, the Sirius channels may not have been for you, the Sirius XM merged channels may not be for you, but to say that the Satellite radio model is eclipsed by Pandora over a data capable phone is laughable; I don't even understand why this idea keeps coming up, outside well covered cities like San Francisco this isn't even possible regardless of a willingness to pony up for it or not.

    You can get started with Sirius for 20-30 bucks (cheap radio + car kit) and a 3 month sub right now (36 bucks). It's 6 more bucks per month per additional radio, so pretty cheap for the wife's car as well. Their online website is actually one of the better ones, despite the use of flash. Tell me how that compares to a iPhone.

    Sirius does work for me on my commute, it's so much better than normal radio I cringe when I have to listen to broadcast FM in someone else's car. I cancelled cable TV and kept my Sirius, I like it that much. It's troubling to see that the company is likely going under without any alternative forthcoming.

  117. Classic case of the poster being out of touch by ChronosWS · · Score: 1

    Until you solve the problem of ubiquitous, seamless radio coverage in the car, your ideas will be relegated to your small, poorly lit IT office where they belong. Solve the real problems, not your pet ones.

  118. Re: Internet Killed the Satellite Radio Star by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

    Bandwidth came and broke your heart
    Put the blame on the router....

    --
    Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
  119. Re:Internet radio was not a major downfall of SIRI by rwa2 · · Score: 1

    Hey, liked your post.

    I always thought that the one feature that Satellite Radio should have provided (but did not) was actually to offer limited internet data service. For example, they could have a data channel that occasionally broadcasts the updated contents of major websites, such as cnn.com, weather.com, hell maybe even slashdot and twitter, etc... whatever people were interested in "subscribing to" when they happened to have full internet or phone connectivity. Their device would just need to set up a little web proxy configured to cache the updates you're interested in, and voila... you've got "good enough" internet news, weather, and updates to a laptop or set-top or PDA in remote locations for much cheaper than other forms of 2-way internet access.

    People (like me) pretty much do something similar to this using AvantGo / Plucker for "time shifted" web browsing... I'd love a way for my Plucker database to be refreshed while I was out in the bush. But obviously these types of users are probably more technical than the Sat Radio's target market.

  120. Re:Radio? What's that?? by markdavis · · Score: 1

    >In all, it comes down to you "open-source" / "pirate" twits that think paying for anything is below them

    Anonymous Coward,

    Perhaps you should re-read my posting. Specifically the part that says: "not because I am adverse to paying for music." I never pirate anything and I am certainly willing to pay reasonable prices for reasonable services, and do, all the time.

  121. Re:What carrier, what location, and what voice pla by GrayCalx · · Score: 1

    Dammit I have to get an iphone. I live out in a rural area and can only get WISP internet which limits my bandwidth. I really should get an iphone and download everything i can with it... then use my WISP for work and movie downloads.

    Okay you've convinced me.
    //runs off to check when my att contract is up for renewal.

  122. the real reason for bankruptcy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ba ba boey ba ba boey!!!!

  123. Re:What carrier, what location, and what voice pla by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

    Get a 3g if you can swing it (and get 3g signal in your area)

    What with ATT throttling Edge (and the limitations of edge in general) my Edge-only iPhone is pretty worthless for streaming nowadays, even something on the level of 64kpbs music.

    Once that's all done, get Pandora and Tuner and have yourself a ball. If you like heavy metal I heartily recommend Braingell Radio via Tuner. (Barring that, set up a Pandora station around Ensiferum)

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  124. Sound quality on sirius. by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    Both of my radios were sirius connect radios hard wired to pioneer head units.

    One of my cars has quite a bit of audio gear in it - Hertz components, Audison 6 channel amp, JL audio stealthbox...etc. I can reasonably say that my audio system will expose flaws in satellite audio that other systems may not.

    The bandwidth and sound quality seemed to vary from station to station. Talk stations had very little in the way of high-frequencies, and rock stations seemed to have a lack of highs as well. The electronic/dance channels seemed to have better highs.

    A Sirius rep confirmed they do monkey with bandwidth on channels from time to time. If I am paying for radio, I want a premium experience - no commercials and good sound quality. I'm not asking for CD quality, but the highs shouldn't sound like a bad MP3.

    -ted