There are two important characteristics that recommend satellite
radio as a service most people would like to have in their vehicles or homes :
quality and content. When talking about quality we mostly refer to how clear
the sound output is from satellite radio when compare to terrestrial radio
broadcasts. Content, on the other hand, refers to the quality of the transited
material. This is where the two giants in the satellite radio industry – Sirius
and XM Radio – battle it out. The quality of the receivers and the technologies
they both use are similar, but the difference can be made when it comes to
exclusive high quality content. Let’s have a look at both the satellite radio
quality and content characteristics :
Broadcasting
quality
The broadcast quality is, when put in numbers, of 128kb/s
44.1khz for both digital radio service providers. This is the equivalent of CD
quality. Although the coverage of satellite radio, which is far superior to
what any terrestrial radio station can deliver, is an important factor, the
quality of the sound is what brought Sirius and XM Radio more subscribers.
There are many similarities to the way digital television worked or how cable
TV has over 80% of the US population as subscribers, although they can receive
free programming using UHF and VHF antennas. It’s the same with satellite radio
– although one can get free terrestrial radio, satellite radio comes at an
affordable price and offer a broadcasting quality that is superior to analog
radio. Also keep in mind that satellite radio is commercial free – and this is
huge selling point.
The high analog-to-digital conversion quality means that there
will be no sound interferences, hissing sounds and other audio disturbances
characteristic to FM and AM transmissions. This is mostly obvious when
listening to music on your satellite radio system. The bass is much stronger
and accurate, while the high sound levels are crystal clear. There is also a
stronger mid range of sounds that you will consider to be more robust and
accurate than what terrestrial radio produces. Although someone with a trained
ear will tell you the music quality is not exactly as good as CD quality, it is
extremely close and for the largest majority of users this difference is not
even noticeable.
Content
So now that we know how good the technological side of satellite
radio really is, let’s have a look at
how broadcasters are trying to improve the quality of the content they provide.
One of the most interesting approaches was to fight for obtaining exclusivity
over some transmissions. For example, negotiations have been carried out
between XM Radio and MLB in order for the satellite radio provider to obtain
exclusivity rights to broadcast all MLB games. In an interview to WSJ, Edison
Media Research's President Larry Rosin declared that "it is probably
inevitable that baseball radio broadcasts will go to a 100% subscription
model... It will happen because there's too much money in it not to do
it." Today, around 23% of XM
subscribers are signed up to receive the MLB transmissions, so there is real
potential in such a venture. Of course, this would be a terrific blow against
terrestrial radio and the two sides are engaged in combat while you are reading
this. Of course, content quality can also be increased by having the best
people in the industry work with satellite radio. Both Sirius and XM Radio know
that someone who pays $300 for a receiver and $10 - $12 each month for a radio
service wants to get the best content out there. Surprisingly, when it comes to
music channels, the difference in content quality between satellite radio and
terrestrial radio is made in one main topic – commercials (or rather, lack of
commercials on satellite radio). Since most of XM Radio and Sirius channels are
in-house productions and only a small percentage are retransmits of terrestrial
radio, this becomes an interesting aspect to consider.
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