DIGITAL TV TRANSITION: Get ready for 2009

‘HDTV Converter’ Scams: What to watch out for.

DTV Converter Boxes: Should you get one for your old TV?

DTV Converter Box alternatives: You don’t have to wait.

THE LATEST

Cable TV

News: Digital cable boxes, DTV PSAs, HDMI 1.3

Friday, June 8th, 2007

Digital cable set-top boxes: Should you buy or rent? As of July 1, you have the choice.

PSAs about digital conversion: Bill from Rep. Engel (D-N.Y.) would mandate them.

Still hiring for the DTV switchover: Broadcast lobby seeks Director of External Relations, Digital Television Transition.

C-SPAN-style TV for local government: This would be worthy programming for multicast channels.

ATI video cards: ‘Upgrade’ saddles owners with broadcast-flag support.

HDTV tech trends: 1080p goes mainstream, HDMI 1.3 reaches market.

ATSC honors: Mark Eyer, Bernard Lechner Award recipient.

Unofficial DTV site unveils converter box section

Friday, June 8th, 2007

Speaking of converter boxes and unveilings, I’ll mention our new Converter Box section that went up this week. I hope it will have everything you want to know about those little boxes that will give your old analog TV a new lease on life after February 17, 2009.

Today’s New York Times article on converter boxes was a good piece, by the way. Blogger Chris’s take:

It’s the first article I’ve seen in a major publication that actually gets the details of the transition right.

Coverage of the DTV conversion by most newspapers has improved, I believe. Jaques Steinberg deserves bonus points for his nuanced, if brief, mention of satellite and cable customers: they are, he wrote, “not expected to have much disruption.” That’s essentially true. For the rest of the story, see these articles:

Digital TV Facts for cable subscribers

Digital TV Facts for satellite subscribers

So, all praise for The New York Times. (I frankly don’t know what we would do without it, and I don’t ever want to find out.) But allow me, if you will, to make one tiny observation about that article, a thoroughly objective one.

It didn’t mention this site.

Well, it’s no surprise that he sends people to the DTV sites put up by the FCC and the broadcasters who lobby them. Those sites are worth looking at, certainly. (What’s more, people know they exist.) They each give you part of the story of the digital TV conversion, from the point of view of a government bureaucracy and the industry it regulates. They will help you through the digital transition.

DTV Facts isn’t as pretty as the broadcasters’ site or as noisy as the FCC’s (which actually scares me every time I go there, even after I switched to the green tea). We’re your unofficial digital TV site, by no means the only one, and I hope we touch on all relevant sides of the story. The move to digital TV has fascinated me from the beginning, so I decided to write about it. That’s my television background. (Well, that and a brief stint as a Mystery Science Theater 3000 intern.) So I am connected neither to the industry nor to what passes for our government, and, you know, my heart is pretty pure for our times.

Finally, I believe you’ll find more about digital-to-analog converter boxes here than at those other two sites. I’ll be adding to the new section as we go. If it doesn’t give you everything you want to know, please get in touch and tell me what’s missing.

Related:
Our Converter Box section

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Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

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Antenna households lag in DTV adoption

Monday, June 4th, 2007

When it comes to the digital TV transition, over-the-air TV viewers are acting like couch potatoes.

The rabbit-ears set is apparently in no hurry to buy digital TV sets or subscribe to cable or satellite TV, according to a study from the Association of Public Television Stations (APTS):

In the past three years over-the- air households purchased new TV sets at about a 12 percent to 13 percent rate each year. In comparison, cable and satellite homes bought new TVs at an 18 percent rate per year. For example, the number of cable/satellite households that owned a digital television grew from 4.49 percent in the first quarter of 2005 to 23.45 percent in the first quarter of 2007. However, the percentage of over-the-air households that owned a digital television only grew from 1.96 percent to 7.12 percent over that same period.

Of the 22 million U.S. households that get their television exclusively free and over-the-air, only 7 percent own a digital television, compared to 23 percent of those who subscribe to cable or satellite.

The study is the latest alarm bell from APTS, which revealed in January that 61 percent of over-the-air households were entirely unaware of the DTV transition, according to a survey it commissioned.

“Our study confirms that the government grossly under-funded consumer education when it mandated the end of television as most people know it by February 2009,” said APTS President and CEO John Lawson. “We need a Y2K-level effort to ensure that people are aware that their older TV sets will go dark in 21 months if they don’t acquire a digital converter, buy a new set or incur the monthly cost of a cable or satellite bill.”

News: DTV patents, LG boxes, analog shutdown

Friday, June 1st, 2007

• A digital TV patent holder sues broadcast networks, cable operators

LG licenses an ARM processor (the ARM926EJ-S) for digital set-top boxes

• A public broadcasting official remains hopeful—mostly—about the analog TV shutdown

• John Edwards calls for DTV spectrum auction rules “that ensure that the airwaves benefit everyone, not just big companies”

News: DTV portables, consumer ed, converters

Monday, May 28th, 2007

• Handheld DTV from Best Buy draws mixed reviews

• Democrats to FCC: Inform consumers on DTV

Digital TV broadcast in Navajo is a first

• Micronas DTV device drivers go open-source

• Converter box, other STB shipments to grow

• SED TVs postponed indefinitely

• Coalition touts broadband plan for analog TV spectrum

News: Spectrum proposal, HD claims, Canada switch date

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

• Google proposes real-time auction for analog TV spectrum

• DirecTV sues Comcast over HDTV quality claims

• Canada will end analog TV broadcasts on August 31, 2011

• Mitsubishi introduces all-1080p line of HDTVs

Will DTV advances spawn new channels?

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

Samsung today announced a new digital TV chip that is said to offer substantially improved over-the-air reception. The technology behind its S5H1411 chip “boasts a 30 percent higher reception success rate than the company’s previous generation digital TV receiver chip released in 2005,” according to Samsung. That claim echoes the 30 percent improvement in receiver performance cited by another Korean manufacturer, LG Electronics, when it unveiled its sixth-generation DTV chip last December.

With the shutdown of analog TV broadcasts throughout the U.S. scheduled for Feb. 18, 2009, the prospect of increasingly robust digital reception may just save the day. As recently as 2005, Sinclair Broadcasting warned that deficiencies inherent in the digital broadcasting standard approved by the FCC would imperil the future of over-the-air TV. Many viewers who had long been satisfied with the reception available through a basic indoor antenna were disappointed to learn that a rooftop model was necessary to watch digital stations. A significant problem for DTV viewers in urban areas was “multipath” interference.

But multipath no longer is a worry, according to LG and Samsung, whose chipsets will also be available to other digital TV manufacturers. If Americans can get crystal-clear HDTV channels over the air for free, it might—just might—be a game-changer for broadcasters.

Because digital TV uses spectrum more efficiently than analog, each local station could offer five or six channels if it wanted to (at the expense of HD broadcasts, by the way); the additional channels are known as multicasts. Just imagine having 30-plus channels of free TV available in metropolitan areas—better yet, don’t imagine it; just go to Britain, where that scenario is already a reality. People like Andrew D. Cotlar have said that the U.S. should follow Britain’s Freeview model, bringing an expanded selection of cable-style channels to antenna households. Until recently I’ve been a skeptic, given the problems that threatened the viability of digital broadcasting in the U.S.

But if more Americans will be able to count on reliable digital broadcasts, local broadcasters may see a chance to win back some market share from cable and direct-broadcast satellite (DBS) television services.

Several hurdles remain, however. The increasing popularity of HD broadcasts in the U.S. leaves less spectrum available for adding new channels. Digital broadcast penetration in the U.S., while growing, is still nowhere near the level of Britain, where, thanks to the multiplicity of channels, more viewers watch digital TV broadcasts than analog. Antenna viewers in the U.S. will be forced to switch to digital within the next two years, of course. But 85 percent of domestic television households subscribe to cable or satellite systems, which are unlikely to add local multicast channels to their lineups unless the government makes them or, perhaps, broadcasters pay them. (Mandatory cable carriage would probably do more than anything else to promote multicasting, though I am still not really sold on that approach.)

Where does that leaves us? Well, I doubt that broadcasters will offer large numbers of cable-style channels until more viewers are actually capable of receiving them. But as digital TVs and converter boxes equipped with decent tuners find a place in more American households, more multicast channels may reach the airwaves. If broadcast networks would provide additional programming feeds to their affiliates, packed with shows that viewers might actually watch, that could start the ball rolling. (I wouldn’t expect the locals to produce much in the way of new programming, given the costs.) Some of the new channels might even be aimed at mobile TV viewers, given recent advances in ATSC’s potential for mobile reception.

Does large-scale multicasting have any chance of grabbing a meaningful slice of the audience at the expense of pay-TV providers? Perhaps not, at this late date. But if broadcasters can find some way to make multicasts profitable, well—it might just save their hides.

Analog cable TV: Getting ready for 2009

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

Analog cable customers stand a better chance of receiving continued access to local stations after the cutover to digital broadcasts in 2009, under a 5-0 decision reached by FCC commissioners last night. The FCC is proposing a requirement that cable companies provide the signals of local channels that elect mandatory carriage in analog as well as digital form.

This is an important, pro-consumer vote by the FCC. Without federal action, subscribers who have not upgraded to digital cable would lose access to local channels or be forced to acquire digital set-top boxes (or cable-ready digital TVs). Forcing cable converter boxes—and new monthly fees—on households that don’t need them would be a tremendous waste, especially considering those boxes’ energy requirements. Our nation and, moreover, our planet cannot afford to just plug in millions of new, unneeded appliances in millions of households. Instead, cable operators should convert the broadcasts from digital to analog form before they are sent to their analog-cable customers. This is the simplest option, and it is backed by FCC Chairman Kevin Martin.

In the longer term, of course, cable will follow broadcasting into the all-digital world. The FCC’s “dual-carriage” proposal would allow a cable company to stop providing the analog signal if all of its subscribers have digital receiving equipment.

The FCC requests comment on its proposed rulemaking.

Related:
Digital TV facts for cable subscribers

• Link: Broadcasting & Cable

Cable can’t degrade local HD broadcasts (much), FCC suggests

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

If your local TV station broadcasts programming in high definition, cable companies will be obligated to provide it that way, the FCC reiterated yesterday.

For the cable customer whose wallet has been lightened by the purchase of an expensive HDTV, however, the devil may be in the details:

Although the law prevents a cable operator from materially degrading an HD broadcast signal, the agency is seeking public comment on how to craft an objective test to determine legal compliance. The agency floated one idea of requiring carriage of “all content bits,” along with another of banning cable from treating HD cable programming better than broadcast HD signals.

It’s the latter idea that presents a problem for HD viewers. It would imply that a cable company could actually diminish the quality of local HD broadcast channels—just not any more than it squeezes the signals of HD cable networks (a penny-pinching practice of some cable operators, drawing frequent complaints from HD enthusiasts who pay additional monthly fees for high-def cable packages).

• Link: Multichannel News

FCC to vote on dual carriage

Friday, April 20th, 2007

FCC chief Kevin Martin’s “dual carriage” proposal will be voted upon next week, according to Multichannel News. The plan, designed to ensure continued delivery of local broadcast channels to analog cable customers following the digital transition in 2009, has been met by pro forma carping from the cable industry.

Other digital TV matters pending at the FCC:

• Martin wants $1.5 million from Congress to inform consumers about the DTV transition.

• The commission is asking for broadcasters’ comments on children’s programming rules.

Local stations on cable: FCC chief’s new plan

Friday, April 13th, 2007

FCC Chairman Kevin Martin hasn’t forgotten about analog cable TV subscribers, according to industry reports this week. Without federal action, standard cable households could stand to lose access to local channels when broadcasters go digital-only after Feb. 17, 2009.

Under Martin’s plan, stations reportedly could demand dual carriage—both analog and digital—from cable operators, but cable companies would be free to drop analog broadcasts if every subscriber has a digital set-top box or a cable-ready digital TV.

Cable customers need to know that they’ll be ready for the digital TV transition. I am pleased to see that Martin is on the case, addressing the issue well in advance of the DTV deadline. The existing must-carry rules are flawed to begin with, granted. But cable viewers, broadcasters and cable companies need to at least know what the rules are so that they may plan accordingly.

Earlier:
Digital cable gets boost from FCC
FCC may help analog cable viewers keep local channels
Local digital stations via cable: FCC muddies waters

• Links: Multichannel News, Broadcasting & Cable