Yes, and then I got a call for them. They activated XM for $2.49 per month, for 3 months and I said, "sure". I'll make sure that I cancel it, the last day of the promo, so I don't get dinged full price for a years subscription.
It means music sounds like it's coming from the bottom of an oil drum. The bit rates are very low; at least it sounds that way.gjrhine said:You may find stations stay on for a few minutes without a subscription. I don't know what "audio streams are wretched" means.
HA HA.gjrhine said:Mine sounds pretty good. try something other than an oil drum.
So, what is it, then? (the bit rate)gjrhine said:Yes I do but I have decent vehicle system and speakers that make it more than acceptable. It is not supposed to sound like a home theater. Ditch the drum.
So, can you not address either question I've raised with an actual answer?gjrhine said:Some research would show you it's the same old bitrate vs. number of channels choice. I'll take the balance they have.
I answer all questions that concern the topic at hand, ignore those that do not. There is a quality/station number balancing act just like in the video spectrum. Do the research. I, for one, prefer the current signal quality over one that gives me less choices in channels.Laxguy said:So, can you not address either question I've raised with an actual answer?
Do you know the bit rate or not? Are you in some way connected to the company?
So, really, you don't know the bit rate? Why not just say that instead of dancing around a direct question?gjrhine said:I answer all questions that concern the topic at hand, ignore those that do not. There is a quality/station number balancing act just like in the video spectrum. Do the research. I, for one, prefer the current signal quality over one that gives me less choices in channels.
Believe it or not, the bit rates are DIFFERENT for different music channels!! Years ago when XM was still a stand-alone service, I saw a blog post on one of the fanboy sites showing a listing of the bit rates for each channel. The channels with the lowest bit rates were the ones where XM assumed listeners weren't that fussy (like the RAP & R & B channels). The channels with very particular listeners (translation: wealthy and willing to pay top dollar for their music) had the highest bit rates (classical) and still do. Even if you don't like classical music, tune one in and see for yourself. They sound BETTER than FM! The "single artist" channels have very low bit rates also as XM must figure that folks that tune in these channels just want to hear their favorite artist and don't really care how bad it sounds. The Beautiful Instrumentals channel (Escape) also has a higher bit rate than the rock channels.Laxguy said:So, really, you don't know the bit rate? Why not just say that instead of dancing around a direct question?
I have to conclude you have a vested interest in the success of Sirius/XM as you won't respond to the query about your connection.