Digital TV
- Nightshade
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Digital TV
All analog TVs will not be able to pick up on-air TV stations without digital tuners. Any older TVs you have (basically any TVs before 2003 or so) will need a digital tuner box to continue to be useful.
Here's where Uncle Sam steps in for you:
https://www.dtv2009.gov/
They're sending up to $80 worth of coupons for up to two tuners per household.
If you don't have cable TV or have some older extra TVs that don't have tuners, better snap these up!
Deadline is Dec. 31st!
(That is, US residents only...sorry Aussies, Canuks and so on.)
Here's where Uncle Sam steps in for you:
https://www.dtv2009.gov/
They're sending up to $80 worth of coupons for up to two tuners per household.
If you don't have cable TV or have some older extra TVs that don't have tuners, better snap these up!
Deadline is Dec. 31st!
(That is, US residents only...sorry Aussies, Canuks and so on.)
.
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
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- DBB Ace
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Re: Digital TV
Great! Since the gov't is forcing analog stations off the air, the least they can do is buy me two converters so I can continue to not watch commercial TV! (that is, I don't watch TV, but since they're using and devaluing my money to do all of this, I might as well burn my share.)ThunderBunny wrote:All analog TVs will not be able to pick up on-air TV stations without digital tuners. Any older TVs you have (basically any TVs before 2003 or so) will need a digital tuner box to continue to be useful.
Here's where Uncle Sam steps in for you:
https://www.dtv2009.gov/
They're sending up to $80 worth of coupons for up to two tuners per household.
If you don't have cable TV or have some older extra TVs that don't have tuners, better snap these up!
Deadline is Dec. 31st!
(That is, US residents only...sorry Aussies, Canuks and so on.)
- SuperSheep
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- SuperSheep
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- Sergeant Thorne
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We got one. Digital is great unless you have a weak signal, then it's worse than analog. At least with analog a weak signal is still comprehensible, though not pretty. With digital the video gets artifacts (like a corrupted AVI or something) and the sound cuts in and out.
Weather Channel: \"the tornado has touched down, and will be tearing through *blip* *garbled image*... and *blip*... counties at a speed of 100MPH!\"
I believe the driving force behind the change was UHF bandwidth... digital television takes up less of it (requiring a smaller range, I believe), leaving the rest for whatever else they've had in their craw.
Weather Channel: \"the tornado has touched down, and will be tearing through *blip* *garbled image*... and *blip*... counties at a speed of 100MPH!\"
I believe the driving force behind the change was UHF bandwidth... digital television takes up less of it (requiring a smaller range, I believe), leaving the rest for whatever else they've had in their craw.
- Tunnelcat
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They can now use the VHF spectrum since it allows them to broadcast farther and more cheaply (less power), thanks to intense lobbying by the broadcasters. Plus they also wanted to keep their old low channel numbers as a side benefit. So now you may need both a UHF and a VHF antenna since broadcasters can use either spectrum now. You can go here to see in the U.S. who's broadcasting in VHF or UHF within your area and the exact distance and direction for aiming your antenna.
http://www.antennaweb.org/aw/welcome.aspx
Also, the digital standard adopted by the U.S. is not as robust and error tolerant as the newer standard used in other countries. The downside is it requires a more precisely pointed antenna to get a picture. Another gotcha is if you get TV from a translator, in other words, you live way out in the sticks, you may not get DTV for awhile since the FCC gave no time limit for changing those over to digital.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_television
But in a city with lots of buildings, you may not even receive certain stations because of building reflections that cause back-lobe interference on many antennas. In the old analog days, you'd get ghosting. Now you'll get either perfect picture, pixel art, no audio or nothing, no in-between picture with the quality standard here in the U.S. Also remember, DTV is not the same as HDTV.
http://www.antennaweb.org/aw/welcome.aspx
Also, the digital standard adopted by the U.S. is not as robust and error tolerant as the newer standard used in other countries. The downside is it requires a more precisely pointed antenna to get a picture. Another gotcha is if you get TV from a translator, in other words, you live way out in the sticks, you may not get DTV for awhile since the FCC gave no time limit for changing those over to digital.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_television
But in a city with lots of buildings, you may not even receive certain stations because of building reflections that cause back-lobe interference on many antennas. In the old analog days, you'd get ghosting. Now you'll get either perfect picture, pixel art, no audio or nothing, no in-between picture with the quality standard here in the U.S. Also remember, DTV is not the same as HDTV.
It was my understanding that the airwaves, T.V and radio in particular where protected from such action. The reasoning was the emergency alert system. So what happens to that now. Lets say in Cali or some other earth quake prone area or flood area takes a wack, the infrastructure goes down, how can we communicate to them on rescue information or what-ever?
No they didn't mandate that all manufacturers install digital tuners. I think the reasoning was that this conversion to digital broadcasting doesn't affect 100% of all broadcasting. It only requires FULL POWER broadcasting stations to convert to all digital. That means there will be a lot of smaller stations that won't have to convert. And that means if all tv's had only digital tuners, then the remaining analog broadcasters won't have an audience. Also, this conversion (for full power stations) doesn't mean that we lose all analog broadcasting. It'll still be there, even on cable systems.
Don't be so openminded that your brains fall out.
- Tunnelcat
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The problem was when digital tuners started showing up in TV's, they were only mandated to be put in the large sets, 25 to 35 inch and larger, not the smaller ones. Those were sold as 'monitors' with only an analog tuner, so noob idiots in early 2006 expecting a less than 25 inch digital TV to be able to receive DTV were sorely disappointed. Only by 3/2007 were ALL TV sizes down to 13 inch required to have digital tuners. If the government had wanted to be fair to consumers, they would have mandated by 3/2006, ALL new sets above 13 inch have both an analog and digital tuner for the transition.
TV SIZE INFO
We bought a Samsung 26 inch flat panel in early 2006. It had an analog tuner but we had to buy a separate digital tuner box, about $300 more, to watch the digital HDTV signals that were being broadcast out of Eugene at the time. But we knew in advance we would have to buy the separate digital tuner for this sized TV to see DTV. It would have been much nicer if these cheap manufacturers had just included a built-in digital tuner in their smaller sets and charged a slightly higher price, but you couldn't even find one back then.
Another issue is the lack of unscrambled QAM Digital tuners for cable signals in a lot of TV sets, although they are regularly showing up in higher end TV's now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QAM_tuner
Also, the cable companies want their 'In Demand' crap and full control over a separate cable box, so they've been fighting the use built-in scrambled QAM tuners for viewing those scrambled cable signals. I've heard that the cable companies may have acquiesced to the Cablecard 2.0 standard that supports two-way interaction (In-Demand) and thusly we may see scrambled QAM tuners in TV's, eventually............
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CableCARD
TV SIZE INFO
We bought a Samsung 26 inch flat panel in early 2006. It had an analog tuner but we had to buy a separate digital tuner box, about $300 more, to watch the digital HDTV signals that were being broadcast out of Eugene at the time. But we knew in advance we would have to buy the separate digital tuner for this sized TV to see DTV. It would have been much nicer if these cheap manufacturers had just included a built-in digital tuner in their smaller sets and charged a slightly higher price, but you couldn't even find one back then.
Another issue is the lack of unscrambled QAM Digital tuners for cable signals in a lot of TV sets, although they are regularly showing up in higher end TV's now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QAM_tuner
Also, the cable companies want their 'In Demand' crap and full control over a separate cable box, so they've been fighting the use built-in scrambled QAM tuners for viewing those scrambled cable signals. I've heard that the cable companies may have acquiesced to the Cablecard 2.0 standard that supports two-way interaction (In-Demand) and thusly we may see scrambled QAM tuners in TV's, eventually............
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CableCARD
Well, manufacturers had to redesign all their TV's, and getting all that done by 2006 was unrealistic anyway.
Having the cable box allows the cable industry to launch new technology without requiring you to buy a new tv. Also, they have had alot of problems with the cable cards. They were a good idea, but evidently they don't work with some TV's and the cards themselves have proven unreliable.
Having the cable box allows the cable industry to launch new technology without requiring you to buy a new tv. Also, they have had alot of problems with the cable cards. They were a good idea, but evidently they don't work with some TV's and the cards themselves have proven unreliable.
- Tunnelcat
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Re:
Cripes! They had ten years to do it! Digital transmissions commenced in limited areas in 1998 and the start of the changeover was mandated in 1996!Capm wrote:Well, manufacturers had to redesign all their TV's, and getting all that done by 2006 was unrealistic anyway.
And now ... The Consumers Union want Congress to delay the transition, and Obama supports that idea.
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Government-IT/ ... DTV-Delay/
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Government-IT/ ... DTV-Delay/