iPhone Shows the Folly of the FCC's Worry About XM-Sirius
OK, so the FCC after 17 months(!) seems finally ready to approve the merger between the two satellite radio companies, XM (XMSR) and Sirius (SIRI). Regulators have a concern that there will be no competitors left in the satellite radio industry. But, if you look not very far ahead, that's like worrying that there will be no competitors in the chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream-making industry. Satellite radio has a lot of happy customers, but even today it's not even remotely the only way to pipe music and news into your car.
Besides regular radio and possible coming digital radio broadcasts, let's take a scenario that's taking form today. Already, owners of the new 3G iPhone are discovering the Internet radio -- especially the Pandora service -- work great on the device. That's a pretty compelling alternative to satellite radio. Plug your iPhone into your car stereo, define the music you want to hear, and you get streaming music -- and it's FREE.
Look, too, at the WiMax efforts by Sprint (S) and its Clearwire (CLWR) partners. You'll have WiFi-like wireless Internet covering whole cities. It can't be long before you can buy a WiMax-enabled car stereo, which could tune in Pandora or Launch or any other streaming service. Again -- for FREE.
For cryin' out loud, let XM and Sirius merge. They're going to have enough trouble competing as a combined company.
Related Articles
|
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »




This article has 3 comments:
- Zeninvestor
- 64 Comments
Jul 24 08:20 AM- User 231984
- 1 Comment
Jul 24 09:15 AM- Allwheeldrive
- 4 Comments
Jul 24 10:48 AM"Plug your iPhone into your car stereo, define the music you want to hear, and you get streaming music -- and it's FREE."
Free? HA! how much does your iphone cost a month?
More by Kevin Maney
Articles on related themes
Mergers & Acquisitions
Radio
Book Publishing
Cable