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Listen up! Here's the scoop on satellite radio

Satellite radio's two major players broke out of the car in 2005, fueled by Howard Stern's move to Sirius and an explosion of devices aimed at bringing satellite radio into the home and onto MP3-type portable music players.

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Those two dominant players, Sirius and XM Radio, are slugging it out for market domination. While each offers a huge variety of programming, their lineups are designed to appeal to different audiences. There's some jockeying over pricing, but subscription fees remain competitive between the two services, and prices are coming down.

By the end of 2005, satellite radio subscriptions were projected to jump to 9.3 million, more than doubling the previous year's consumer base, according to an eMarketer report on the satellite radio industry published in November. By the end of the decade, analysts predict satellite radio services could have more than 35 million subscribers.

So where to go?

"For consumers, the choice comes down to the programming by the two major vendors -- Sirius and XM," says John Haynes, lead technology buyer for Al & Ed's Autosound in Los Angeles. "The costs are about the same, and they are coming out with similar devices. What many people don't realize is that the quality of sound from satellite radio is outstanding, and you can tune in no matter where you are."

Programming options
Each service offers more than 100 channels of music, talk radio, sports, news, traffic and weather reports. Sirius snagged Howard Stern's shock jock show; XM's alternatives are "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" and Opie and Anthony's cutting-edge shock radio.

The variety of music stations is mind-boggling on both networks. If you're into rock music, Sirius offers 18 different channels ranging from pure hard rock to indie/college rock, while XM offers 13 rock music channels including punk/hardcore/ska and acoustic rock.

Don't fret, classical music fans, there's plenty for you, too: Both services offer three classical music stations.

Other genres include country, jazz and blues, Latin, urban, show tunes, Christian, gospel, and kids' music, with both services offering multiple channels in virtually every genre.

In terms of sports, XM has the rights to broadcast Major League Baseball and NASCAR, while Sirius features the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, as well as the NCAA March Madness College Men's Basketball tournament. NASCAR will move to Sirius in 2007.

As for specialty programming, there are lots of options. Nuts about Elvis? Tune in to Sirius Channel 13, all Elvis, all the time. Hooked on Snoop Dogg? XM pipes his music selections directly from his L.A. home.

 
 
Next: "But what if you just want music?"
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