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- Seen Apr 22, 2018
an actual fm radio is still a common fixture in my house, and it is used regularly by my family and friends when we hit the road. True, the selection of music has dropped off the side of a very tall, uncreative cliff since the turn of the latest century, but I like to use the radio for local news and night time debates. It doesn't have to be all music, all the time.
Bleh, I have an iPhone if I want news and opinion on the go. You can always just turn on the TV for local news, as well.
When I'm driving, the only thing I want to hear less than bad, overplayed music is chatter, regardless of if it's news or a dumb commercial. As a result, I often drive in silence, which can actually be quite relaxing, in fact.
(My car is a late 70s model, so hooking up an MP3 or even popping in a CD isn't exactly an option. Ironically, popping in a CD isn't an option with my mom's brand new car either. My, how times have changed! {XD})
I hope that FM radio prevails well into this century. I'd hate to see it get phased out like analogue (but say, aren't digital signals still transmitted in analogue, and get converted back to digital at destination? That's what I heard, anyway), as I really do not like this 'always on and connected' society we're becoming.
Digital and analog TV signals are completely different. Digital signals are stored in the form of a gazillion 1s and 0s, which gives you a picture that looks clearer and uses less bandwidth, but degrades much faster.
It's only a matter of time until old school broadcast radio is shut down in the same way that old school broadcast TV was. The UK has already begun the transition to digital radio, for example.