Satelite Programming

PAkev

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 9, 2002
Messages
665
I'm trying to educate myself on Sattelite Radio and like the idea of commercial free programing. It will probably be used most in my office to play subtle non offensive music but would like to be able to put it in my car or boat if I wish to do so. It is my understanding there are two major players in the sattelite programming arena; XM and Sirrus. Not really sure about the pros and cons of each. Also, there seems to be a big delta in the receiver hardware which ranges from $49 to over $250. Other than features can a more expensive unit offer better signal reception than the less expensive alternatives? Is there any new receiver technology on the horizon in the near future that may be worth waiting for?<br /><br />Helpful advice appreciated!
 

Bob_VT

Moderator & Unofficial iBoats Historian
Staff member
Joined
May 19, 2001
Messages
26,066
Re: Satelite Programming

Great systems and both providers are good. I like the fact that for less than the cost of one music cd you pay for the monthly fees. XM seems to have a slight edge over Sirrus but it is like comparing Dish vs Direct TV.
 

18rabbit

Captain
Joined
Nov 14, 2003
Messages
3,202
Re: Satelite Programming

Programming-wise, and cost-wise, they are both about the same. The diff is one has Martha Steward, the other doesn’t. One has Howard Stern, the other doesn’t. One has NFL, the other doesn’t. I think one of them has NASCAR, too. That kind of thing. Music content is too similar to distinguish between the two. XM seems to appeal to folks old enough to remember classic rock, Sirius seems preferred by the those that prefer more contemporary music. Both are ok for background classical music, neither are satisfactory for opera. XM used to be pretty good for political-talk, evenly balanced between liberal and conservative programming.<br /><br />If you have DirecTV, you now have the XM radio free via your sat receiver. Look in the 800 channels where the MC’s (music channels) used to be. Many of the XM receivers were made by Delphi. Delphi filed for bankruptcy this year but it’s not going away, just reorganizing. Don’t know how or if that impacted XM’s music service. Perhaps the biggest diff between the two corps is that XM didn’t gamble just on a music service. Their two sats (one named Rock and the other named Roll) were designed for other sat services; weather programming (see Garmin products and wxworx.com), and something to do with a private ‘locating’ service, something like a rescue beacon, but not intended for rescue like an EPIRB is. A third XM sat is scheduled to be launch anytime now, don’t know what for.<br /><br />Those little Delphi XM receivers are now on their third generation. The first gen were junk. The second gen is good stuff, the third gen is the same as the second but with minor tweaks. Folks have modified the second gen receivers to create a digital TOS-link output so they can record a digital path from sat to CD. No need to pay for CDs anymore.<br /><br />The bandwidth of sat music in not as high as it is with a CD but most folks can’t tell the diff. At the same time, the digital entertainment industry as a whole is changing. Higher res music and video sources were introduced in Asia and Europe at the beginning of the year, just now come to the US. Also, there is a whole new push to promote the free hi-res digital FM format (not in all areas, yet). It’s similar to sat radio but has commercials, hence the “free” part.<br /><br />I had XM for 6-months, liked it, but they bumped the cost from $10/month up to $12. With inexpensive MP3 players littering the landscape, I can’t see anyone paying for sat reeceiver hardware and then a music service when they can get an MP3 player that will hold 100-million CDs worth of music for less than the annual XM fee...and listen to what they want to when they want to.<br /><br />Edit: another diff is the Apple vs IBM (PC) marketing schemes. Both Apple and XM control the manf and distribution of their hardware, IBM and Sirius license the technology to many companies. So, less selection of Apple and XM hardware, greater selection of (IBM) PC and Sirius hardware.
 

jimr

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 21, 2004
Messages
723
Re: Satelite Programming

you can also get XM through windows media player.
 

PierBridge

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 3, 2004
Messages
625
Re: Satelite Programming

You should sign up for the free online trials of each service. <br /><br />I tried plug and play units for both XM and Sirius....I chose Sirius for my taste in the end.<br />Their over all line up "music,sports,talk" was better for me then XM's, actually Sirius has more of a main stream hit's based line up with lots of old school classic music, where as XM has a much deeper play list with more under ground music, which works great for some.<br />I liked them both but for me I was having to work to hard to find music I liked on XM.<br /><br />Here are a few of links to help.<br /><br /> http://www.siriusbackstage.com/forum/ <br /><br /> http://www.xmorsirius.com/ <br /><br /> http://www.xmfan.com/
 

tomatolord

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Oct 1, 2004
Messages
548
Re: Satelite Programming

I have sirius because of the sports.<br /><br />You do have to look beyond to certain sports, like XM has ACC sports.<br /><br />As far as the receivers are concerned the new thing is portability.<br /><br />The new units have built in harddrives that record the shows you want and then you can take the unit with you to play back what you want to listen to.<br /><br />This way you do not need access to the satellite to use the unit.<br /><br />Some have a built in antenna,<br /><br />some can connect to your in car navigation system so that when they broadcast a traffic problem your nav system will automatically reroute you
 
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