Factory Digital Radio With Tagging Is Available on Lincoln Crossover
     
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Backers of HD Radio and song tagging have been pushing for a greater presence for their respective technologies on the menu of factory options available to consumers who buy a new vehicle.

Both camps hope to get a boost with an announcement from Lincoln. An available feature on the 2011 MKX luxury crossover is a factory installed HD Radio receiver with iTunes Tagging.

Lincoln says this is the first time anywhere that car buyers can get a factory-installed HD Radio receiver with iTunes Tagging.

(Other available features in the fancy-schmancy car model are a blind-spot information system; ambient lighting with choice of seven colors; rear camera; and a heated steering wheel.)

With tagging, the user pushes a button to "tag" a desired song heard on the radio; when he or she docks an iPod to the car's SYNC system, the tag information will transfer to it. When the iPod is later synced to Apple iTunes, a playlist of tagged songs will appear, and the user can choose to buy songs from the iTunes Store.

Related:
"What's the Outlook for Tagging?" (May 2010)

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Realistically John, the only people desperate are the ones that have a financial stake in this poorly managed fiasco. Success of terrestrial Radio in the U.S. isn't based on the mode of transmission but rather on content (or lack of).
By Richard Niesley on 9/8/2010
Good to see more automakers adding digital radio to their vehicles. The U.S. desperately needs HD Radio to keep terrestrial broadcasting relevant. Good job Ford!
By John Nyquist on 9/7/2010
HD Radio is the best upgrade I ever did to my vehicle, but newer vehicles aren't using standard size radios anymore so it's great to see so many vehicle lines adding HD as an option (or better yet making it standard). A lot of the non-mainstream formats are moving to HD. What's really needed now is to set a date to mandate that all vehicle radios be capable of receiving HD, just like dates were set to require seat belts and safety glass. HD is not only for entertainment, it can provide vital safety information as well.
By Gary Grantham on 9/9/2010
Give me a break. IBiquity wants to be kept relevant since digital radio is a dismal failure. Consumers don't care. Nice try.
By Anonymous on 9/8/2010
Two years to late. It is DOA unless an immediate addition (free) installation from the factory of every vehicle HD radio.
By Anonymous on 9/8/2010

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