The National Association of Broadcasters, which represents thousands of radio and TV stations and networks, is pushing for Apple to implement FM radio capabilities in new generations of iPhones and iPods. To this end, David K. Rehr, president and CEO of the NAB, personally wrote a letter to the COO of Apple outlining all the potential benefits of outfitting Apple’s products with such technology: added value for consumers, additional revenue through song tagging, emergency broadcast capabilities, and so on.
Does this seem backwards to you? Believe it or not, with all of the music discovery and listening options out there today, terrestrial radio remains the most dominant and influential factor on music purchasing decisions. It sounds surprising, but hey, satellite radio is on the brink of failure, most online radio stations are struggling to turn a profit, and radio pop, rock, and hip hop songs are still selling in the hundreds of thousands. After all, people still have a drive to and from work where radio is the primary source of entertainment.
You can read the full letter from Rehr to Apple COO Timothy Cook here.
Rehr Encourages Apple to Add FM Radio Capabilities to iPhone, iPOD [NAB.org]
Tags: iphone, ipod, NAB, traditional radio



Apple should do this. If I could listen to local radio stations and then tag a song for later download through iTunes — that is money in the bank for Apple. And more music for me.
Now that is amazing. Though if they do it, I think maybe they might profit a little more from having certain next-gen iPhones/iPods have access to HD Radio as well. More channels, more advertising, etc… Probably more benefits, but I’m not sure, since I’m no expert on the subject. But it was a fun thought.
Great read Zircon, thanks.
Alot of bloggers not too happy with this new iPad.There was just too much hoopla regarding it and alot blogers got turned off.Quite frankly, I actually see lots of the awesome potential of the gadget. Third-party soft for composing tunes, games, newspapers and magazine and books, all kinds of awesome stuff, but they just didn’t really sell it right (aside from the books). It looks rather unfinished