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On 1/30/25 4:37 AM, D wrote:That's a wonderful take on quality! =D Reminds me of when blueray came out, and I never watched any. DVD:s look all good, but acquaintances who were so into blueray said it hurt their eyes to look at the low quality of dvd:s. I smiled and thought of VHS and that we all somehow managed to survive that. ;)On Thu, 30 Jan 2025, WokieSux282@ud0s4.net wrote:>
On 1/30/25 12:43 AM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:Did anyone here ever try this product?On 2025-01-30, Rich <rich@example.invalid> wrote:Yep, PLENTY of them - English and Spanish.
In the US, depending upon where you are geographically, AM is one of:I was driving home, early Sunday morning
1) talk radio
2) bible radio (i.e., also talk, but where they talk about how if you
just accept Jesus into your heart *now* you'll be saved, but only if
you first send $29.95/month to Mr Jim Jones to support his parish
mission)
Through Bakersfield, listening to gospel music
on the colored radio station
And the preacher said,
"You know, you've aaaaaaaalways got the Loooooord by your side."
I was so pleased to be informed of this
That I ran twenty red lights in His honor.
Thank you, Jesus. Thank you, Lord.
-- Rolling Stones: Faraway Eyes
I drove through Bakersfield late one night years ago.
There were Bible thumpers all up and down the dial.
AM radio is almost entirely 'Talk' - usually
further 'right' - or Jesus freaks in the USA.
That's its current niche. FM *is* superior
for music - but the RANGE is short and now
it is infested with adverts. As 'net radio'
gains, expect MORE adverts.
However there's no great replacement for
broadcast radio. Instant info, local
interests, no subscriptions/monitoring/
ad-bots or such.
https://tivoliaudio.com/pages/experience-model-one-digital-wifi-bluetooth-fm-radio-gen-2 Maybe it is possible to play online radio stations with it and a nicely integrated package. What I do not know is if it requires an app (in which case it is a garbage product since I do not have a smart phone) or if it is one of those things that works for 1 year, and once the online radio stations move to other software and servers it stops working.
I have an early 50s AM radio. It still works. No software
to update, no changes in platform. Have some spare
tubes/valves. Can likely resist a nuclear EMP.
>
As for music on AM ... being of a Certain Age I just
don't HEAR the signal/noise ratio - it's "normal" to
my ear, kinda like the noise of a needle on vinyl.
Grew up with it.
I don't listen to radio much, mostly driving, but I'm
glad it's still there.
>
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