USDTV Announces Low-Cost, Localized Digital TV 246
pagercam2 writes "According to a CNN story, USDTV is about to roll out a new digital TV service, the difference being that it doesn't use cable or a satellite. They stream the DigitalTV signals on currently idle frequencies to standard UHF/VHF antennas. The service includes 35 channels, including local stations as well as many of the basic cable (Disney, Discovery, ESPN, TLC, FOOD...) with more to come. $19.95/mo is the price point for a basic service, though '...customers must buy a $99.95 set-top device to decode the channels.' Initially to be rolled out in Salt Lake City, Las Vegas and Albuquerque, could USDTV keep prices low and still support local content since they have no cable network to maintain, and no satellites to launch?"
sounds familiar (Score:2)
does anyone know if they will be using DVB (Digital Video Broadcast) format? (I didn't read the article so don't flame me...)
in case they are, this would be easy to pick up on computer's equipped with a dvb pci card and software
Re:sounds familiar (Score:5, Informative)
Freeview [freeview.co.uk]
topup.tv [topup.tv]
Re:sounds familiar (Score:3, Informative)
Re:sounds familiar (Score:2, Informative)
DVB is a bit like GSM, which means most countries use it apart from the US
Re:sounds familiar (Score:5, Informative)
Re:sounds familiar (Score:2)
Basically any tips, help, forum links w
wireless Internet over UHF? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:wireless Internet over UHF? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:wireless Internet over UHF? (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, most TV markets are a LOT larger than 50,000 people. There are plenty of transmitters in the NE which can get over 1M viewers.
Hmm... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Evidently, you've never seen the electric bill for a 100,000 watt transmitter.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Informative)
And.... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Well, as far as I know, you can't get Discovery, TLC, USA, or ESPN with a regular antenna... but you can with this service.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Content vs. Medium vs. Standards (Score:4, Informative)
The difference that digital TV makes is spectrum efficiency - the US HDTV standards can fit a digital HDTV signal in the same space as an analog TV channel, or they can use the same bitstream-over-radio to carry about four lower-resolution TV channels, using protocols that are uglier than you'd expect to multiplex them on the bitstream. The ugliness of the protocols reflects the ugliness of political process that led to the design, with the FCC, the existing broadcast TV license-holders, the big networks, the cable TV companies, and several competing hardware folks in on the deal. They sold it to the public as High Definition TV, but of course there's not too much content where HDTV matters (mostly sports and movies, but not most sitcoms or dramas or news or talk shows), so by the time the standards were mandatory, the broadcast license owners got to convert their analog stations to "Digital TV", which can use the bits for HDTV or lower resolution content, giving them multiple low-res channels instead of the one they used to have, which they can essentialy sublet out to other people if they don't want to package their own content for it.
The US FCC essentially nationalized the public's airwaves back in the 30s, along with the rest of the New Deal power grabs, and rents it back to big media companies or occasionally small well-behaved media companies in return for the ability to bully them around about content. Occasional gaps in the coverage have slipped by, allowing things like WiFi, but most of the spectrum is subject to political control, and that means of course that everybody lobbies the FCC.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:4, Interesting)
In fact our big pay-to-view digital terrestrial tv company went spectacularly boom and nearly took out half of the soccer world with it, so that we had only free-to-air digital for a while, although a new player is now attempting to make pay to view digital terrestrial work again.
And if they hit the target for analogue switch over (unlikely as lots of voters have analogue only tv's still) then there will be lots more room to grow the digital tv space.
Also doing it in Australia on free to air (Score:3, Interesting)
So we get all our tv transmitted in unencrypted, 6Mbit (or there abouts) MPEG, widescreen. Each channel has about 21-25 Mbit of bandwidth so most stations also transmit a HD signal as well. Currently I think on
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, a prominent example of this being done in Germany is the area around Berlin, where they have in fact performed a mandatory switch to digital, hundreds of thousands of analogue receivers notwithstanding. The public was not amused, but I guess they resigned to fate and got their decoders - those who weren't a
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
"Idle frequencies" my ass! This is broadcasters stealing bits from the bandwidth given to them to broadcast High-Definition television. 1080i requires the full 19.2 megabits (720p can get by with 15 megabits). Anything less requires filtering out detail before the encoder. I've seen network feeds at 35 megabit, and I can assure you that getting it down to 19.2 costs a lot of quality. What a lot of these broadcasters (Fox expecially) want to do is broadcast a single 480p wide-screen standard-definition versi
Encrypted? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Encrypted? (Score:5, Informative)
Check this list [fcc.gov] to see what stations are operating in your area. Call them and ask what kinds of services they will be offering. many stations simulcast their regular lineup as part of the FCC transition program.
Re:Encrypted? (Score:2)
Sweet! (Score:2)
I just hope these guys pickup cartoon network soon.
Re:Sweet! (Score:2)
I just hope these guys pickup cartoon network soon.
Prepare to be disapointed. This thing doesn't offer any HDTV that isn't already available over the air. Their 10 pay channels are all non-HDTV channels.
And as to picking up more channels... that's doubtful. It's hard to squeeze much more than 3 or 4 extra channels onto a digital TV signal, so they need 3 or 4 local broadcasters to help them out. They won't be adding any more channels because
Antenna troubles? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Antenna troubles? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Antenna troubles? (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, .50/channel :)
I want a system where I can pick each and every channel individually. I'd only want about 12-15 of them and I'd be willing to pay
Re:Antenna troubles? (Score:2, Informative)
Broadcasts come from the CN tower (taller than anything else), plus broadcasts from upstate NY come in over Lake Ontario unobstructed.
That's something I miss about TO, the fact that you could completely do away with cable and still have all the major networks with a decent roof antenna, Canadian and American.
Re:Antenna troubles? (Score:2, Insightful)
Waayyyhay! And they say slashdotters need girlfriend/boyfriends. Way to use that technology, sir!
Nothing new... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Interesting)
Basically it was providing less channels than most of the competing pay services, and while it had the advantage that you could get it absolutely anywhere without changing the house (great if you're living in university halls of residence), that wasn't enough to make it successful.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2, Funny)
That really depends on how you measure success. Ok granted financially it was a disaster, the service wasn't as good as the competition and despite what you say there were at least some areas where it couldn't be received(Freeview suffers from the same problem).
On the other hand those monkey adverts were superb.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2)
Also they made some bad business decisions, like buying the rights to 1st, 2nd and 3rd divsion (not premiership) football matches for a massive amount of money that they could not and would not recoup. They ended up going under and almost took the football clubs with them.
OT, but to all the UK readers Joel Vietch (of RatherGood.com) is doing some cartoons on Channel 4 in about 5 mi
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2)
Used Google cache because the Guardian require regsitration for their media section.
I wonder (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
Acquiring the signal will be the same as normal TV. Difference is that digital signal has some type of FEC. Once you acquire the datastream you will have decent picture. Problem will be keeping the stream (with weak signal). Should look the same as a net stream that's congested.
Curious (Score:4, Insightful)
I know it's been a big deal lately that there has been a new sat. receiver released that can descramble Dish Network signals without the use of a SmartCard by simply providing it the latest decryption keys which anyone can get from a website.
Curious how long it'll take before they crack the protection on this system... so anyone can get free digital TV anywhere (well, if they roll it out everywhere).
Like On Digital/ITV Digital used to be in the UK? (Score:4, Informative)
We've now got FreeView [freeview.co.uk], a free to air replacement. Same technology sans encryption. There's also a group called Top Up TV [topuptv.com], who are looking to add some pay channels to Freeview, but they look likely to fail due to lack of new equipment to receive pay channels on, and a poor selection of channels (limited due to lack of UHF bandwidth).
No Comedy Central (Score:5, Funny)
Child Development: South Park
Sociology: Dave Chapelle
News: Daily Show w/ Jon Stewart
There's even optional:
geography: Dave Attel
As I wrote to the CEO of Dish Networks, lack of comedy central will be the deal breaker.
Re:No Comedy Central (Score:2)
forensics and investigation : reno 911
communication skills : crank yankers
remember child development begins its 8th season tonight
A Bugg
Already in service in .NL (Score:4, Interesting)
Indeed, the service is a little cheaper than the common cable system, but brings about one major disadvantage: You will need a receiver and subscription for every receiver you own. So if you have 2 TV's and a VCR, you need 3 subscriptions, and this setup is more expensive than cable plus an amplifier and indoor coax cabling.
However, the service can be used on the road, allowing good quality TV reception in vehicles and on, for example, campsites.
Re:Already in service in .NL (Score:2)
>Indeed, the service is a little cheaper than the common cable system
Digitenne offers only about 2/3 the channels of a typical cable system.
It seems attractive until you notice that it has no BBC, no Belgium channels, no German channels, etc.
A satellite receiver setup costs less than Digitenne and offers much, much more.
I am considering to end my cable subscription and looked at Digitenne as a backup for bad weather conditions and
I've seen the displays... (Score:4, Interesting)
I prefer a lot of channels so I can skip the trash and find the good shows... I just don't see that as an option for this service. The HDTV aspect is attractive, but I don't have the money for the TV! (I know, I know, I am a bad bad bad geek)
With thier $19 price structure it looks like they are going after customers that want basic with some premium channels but not the high price, I think that is the same market that does NOT have HDTV's.
My brother is thinking about signing up so to add HDTV to his big screen, but he will still keep his dish.
~Z
Re:I've seen the displays... (Score:2)
Re:I've seen the displays... (Score:2)
That would leave you with "channel" line 1 in and watching home movies on the VCR
Re:I've seen the displays... (Score:3, Funny)
With a lot a channels, all you have is more trash to skip.
How long will it take? (Score:2)
So those channels are going to come through the antenna, uh?
How long do you think it'll take to adapt certain programs [geocities.com] to decode more than Nagravision?
In Europe, there's a channel called Canal+ that's been software-decoded for years, and they can't really do much about it. I would think people would get cracking on the code even faster when 35 channels could be available.
The Choice of Cities (Score:5, Funny)
Salt Lake City - only watch the 700 Club
Las Vegas - too busy gambling
Albuquerque - can't afford tv's
Re:The Choice of Cities (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know what gave you that idea. It's more like Albuquerque - highest per capita of PhD's of any large city in the nation - don't watch TV.
Digital TV (Score:3, Informative)
Flatlanders (Score:2)
but (Score:2)
Re:but (Score:2)
Possibly illegal? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Possibly illegal? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Possibly illegal? (Score:2)
An educational station can lease out its bandwidth to commercial ventures, but it cannot broadcast commercial announcements. For FCC purposes, the defintion of a commercial announcement on an educational station is anything that mentions either the prices of products for sale, a competitor, or make a comparitive statement like saying they are the "best" at something. It's a subtil
Further reading... (Score:4, Interesting)
I went ahead and did some reading and it seems that when you purchase the unit, you have to call customer service and read them the UID number and the serial number from the receiver.
I'm sort of disappointed in their engineering department. I give it 3 months of mass market exposure before you see a hack (perhaps opening the unit and being able to serial into it?) that will let you change the UID and Serial Number to perhaps an existing subscription. or even a universal unlock code (like region 0), who knows.
Big Fat Fiber Pipe (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Big Fat Fiber Pipe (Score:4, Interesting)
Dang straight. I was talking to a Verizon field technician today and he says he and about a hundred and forty other techs are being trained to install fiber. Verizon is trying to push fiber out to the last mile to compete with cable companies. He said they already have one "test neighborhood" in Cerritos where they've been stringing fiber from the pole to the POD on every house they service. It is Verizon, though, so for internet connectivity they'll probably still only give you the option of $50/mo for a 1500/256 async, or $300/mo for a 3000/3000, offering absolutely nothing in between, the way they do with DSL. I can see them spending a crapload putting in fiber, then selling it like it's cable TV and DSL. "Yeah, we have the bandwidth to offer you a 10GBps connection, but since we charge $300 for 3MBps, that'll cost you $10,000 per month".
Re:Big Fat Fiber Pipe (Score:2)
I often wonder if the telecoms really want to compete with cable. They must know that fiber to the house would BLOW CABLE AWAY. So why don't they do it? [tinfoil hat]It's a conspiracy![/tinfoil hat]
Re:Big Fat Fiber Pipe (Score:2)
Regardless, though, you have a good point for where wires/fiber can be run easily, however, in a smaller town where you may be able to put an antenna up HIGH without worrying about local restrictions, you may be able to service the people better than laying physical wire...
USDTV? (Score:5, Funny)
If this is over public airwaves (Score:2, Interesting)
"equipment rental" my ass.
Re:If this is over public airwaves (Score:3, Informative)
Re:If this is over public airwaves (Score:2)
This is THEFT of public resources (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What are you smoking? (Score:3, Insightful)
Right. But most TV stations have never had to buy the rights to their licenses at an auction. In the early days of broadcasting, radio and TV licenses were handed out to anybody who thought they could make a viable business out of it, and so long as they keep a signal on the air and don't seriously violate FCC rules, stations are allowed to renew their license infinitely. In fact, station owners are allowed to sell their licenses with not
Re:What are you smoking? (Score:2)
Sure, my scheme would have to have a written out definition of what counts as a public interest program so that the losing station can be determined by a mathematical calculation. The way I'd do it is to have a list of ways a program can be certified as public interest programming such as a news program produced within the station's area, a political debate between viable candidates in an upcoming election, an educational program certified b
$2 a channel? (Score:4, Informative)
Everything else they list on this page [usdtv.com] are channels that can be plucked out of the air with a standard digital TV tuner in the Salt Lake City area. So, in effect, viewers are paying $19.95 to get 10 channels... roughly $2 per channel.
More spectrum monopolies (Score:2)
Hardly seems worth it. (Score:2)
This deal, you have to buy a $100 set-top box, that controls one TV, and then you have to pay at a minimum $20 per month, doesn't seem like quite a deal, and seems like it would be easy, almost too easy to lose reception, just like using a regular antenna. I don't see this deal as anything spectacular, I'd rather deal with my cable company (or you may wish to continue to deal with your satelite company). Doesn't seem like there is anywhere in this whole deal that would be very beneficial to anyone.
Basic
Re:Hardly seems worth it. (Score:2)
Not to be alarmist or crude but Where the fuck do you live? Here in comcast country (michigan) where your cable choices are comcast, comcast, comcast, comcast, or, if you're lucky enough to live in an outlying area, comcast, 40-45 bucks a month is the norm. That's pretty close to direct TV rates. 45 b
Re:Hardly seems worth it. (Score:2)
Comcast unfortunately doesn't list the "basic" setup on their website, there is a setup with them, however, and the cost is about $15-$18 per month, it includes 20-30 channels, although, it doesn't include ESPN, or ESPN2. When they say basic, they definetely mean basic. I can't even remember the complete channel line up (as I have moved away from Comcast (out of UT into MT) and I am now dealing with Bresnan), but for the price, and quality programming on these days, basic setup is nice, if you're rarely h
Re:Hardly seems worth it. (Score:2)
Why not switch? It's more, by a couple of bucks. For $39.99 a month, you can get DTV's Total Choice plus locals package, which includes all the channels you listed as your interests (Discovery, History, Speed, and Fox Sports Detroit). If you're too far out for locals, you can shave $3 a month off that bill. Or, if you want, you can add $3 a month and get the Total Choice Plus pack, wh
DTV decoder? (Score:2)
Unfortunately, such devices seem to cost more in the $250 and up range than the $100 range.
It was a disaster in the UK. (Score:2, Interesting)
In fact the only success was the funny knitted mascot toy they made famous which was used in the advertisements these sometimes fetching crazy prices on ebay at the time.
Great Idea, In Theory (Score:3, Insightful)
I've also heard that Disney has invested money in USDTV. It appears that this is true, given the some of the channels: 2 pure Disneys, 2 ESPNs, 2 and Lifetimes. It looks like USDTV can't get away from one of the evils of cable: forced bundling.
Like Look TV ? (Score:2)
Available in a few Canadian cities.
Untill the capture the market (Score:2)
Costs have little to do with retail pricing once the market has been captured.
Idle frequencies? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd be peeved if someone decided that a station that I watch was too far away to matter, and set up a scrambled broadcast on the same frequency.
Answers to several questions I've seen (Score:5, Informative)
2. Yes its on the "public airwaves", just encrypted. The FCC says no encrypting primary network feeds (either SD or HD), but they can do whatever with the extra space they have.
3. Its using the extra space in the digital channel. The 8VSB modulation scheme will allow for 19.4Mbit/s per channel. 1080i HD takes up about that much, 720p uses 14Mb/s or so, 480i/p take up about 3Mb/s. So if I own a digital channel and only transmit in 480i/p then I've got lots of extra bandwidth, and I can sell it to someone else.
4. A *very* important thing to note is that the receiver will output ANYTHING unless you fork over the $20/mo. If you pay the $99 or whatever to buy the receiver and decide you dont like it, you're out the money. You cant use it as a HDTV OTA receiver (to receive channels that are in the air and not encrypted). You must pay USDTV money to keep the box from becoming a really expensive doorstop. Likewise, if USDTV goes out of business, you will probably have a really expensive doorstop.
I don't think they'll do too well (Score:2)
There are 2 ESPN channels (why 2?)
There are 2 carto
In Utah, they are using non-commercial frequencies (Score:3, Interesting)
Some research has been about USDTV's operation in Utah and they appear to be using channels that have been allocated to the "Utah State Board of Regents" [fcc.gov], which is the state board responsible for overseeing education in Utah.
IANAL, but according to FCC regulations (47CFR73) [gpo.gov] "noncommercial educational broadcast stations will be licensed only to nonprofit educational organizations upon a showing that the proposed stations will be used primarily to serve the educational needs of the community; for the advancement of educational programs; and to furnish a nonprofit and noncommercial television broadcast service."
We feel USDTV might be in violation of these regulations and we've been searching for answers as to the nature of the agreement between the two entities. So far our efforts to contact them have not yeilded results. Does anyone have any understanding of how they are able to license this "non-commercial" bandwidth?
Credit for most of the research goes to Luke Jenkins. There's a complete history of the research he's been doing to get to the bottom of this matter here: http://a.zzq.org/kulc/ [zzq.org]
This takes away from HDTV programming.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, if a station is broadcasting HDTV, this is taking precious bandwidth away from the primary video channel. For 1080i broadcasts, this can really degrade the quality of the HD video. Particularly when showing fast moving sports, they really need the full available bandwidth to do a decent job.
So, this service encourages stations to not carry HD programs, and instead get a cut of the revenue on these pay stations.
In the end, I think the market will reject this.. there are too many drawbacks (extremely limited number of channels that can be offered (no CNN, no HBO.. they will only be able to carry 6-10 pay channels depending on local conditions), very minimal ability to offer HDTV programming (both cable and satellite are now positioning HDTV as a competitive issue, by the nature of this service they will not be able to support ESPN-HD, HBO-HD, Discovery-HD, etc.).
Wow! Beaming TV through the air! (Score:3, Funny)
Amost a good deal, then again... (Score:4, Insightful)
The pay channels are not the HDTV versions, they are old 480i signals.
So 75% of what they offer for $19.95/month is already free so you are paying for only 11 pay channels that are non-HDTV format. That's about $1.81/channel each month.
A comparable Dish Network package comes with 60 channels at $24.99/month. Which comes to about $0.42/channel each month.
Now if I were to recalculate those numbers considering which pay channels are complete crap then they would get a little closer but I'm sure the satellitte will still be a much better deal. For now I think I'll stick with my rabbit ears and Dish Network subscription. But I am currently looking into switching to Voom satellitte TV which is ALL HDTV.
burnin
Poor summary, but good idea (Score:5, Interesting)
The service is not using "idle frequencies", it is using active frequencies but spare bandwidth. I.e., it is including its scrambled signal in with the standard digital broadcast signal of one or more other stations.
If these stations have the spare bandwidth, this is a win/win for both the station and USDTV, since they get the cost of a tower and transmitter underwritten by USDTV, and USDTV gets a medium they don't have to worry about licenses for.
This will be a benefit to those areas where the local stations are hard-pressed to come up with the funds to go digital (even though they must). It will also be a big help in areas currently served by translators, since those are sometimes operated by small groups within the community they serve. They can still translate, and sell the excess space to USDTV, who pays for the hardware.
Re:YES (Score:2, Funny)
In that case, you need a Lazybowl.
Re:YES (Score:2)
The could but they won't. At $99.95 (which is not 'low') for a box costing $2.50 to build and $15 to supply they're onto a moneyspinner.
How many more goddessdamn set-top boxes am I expected to buy? There's a whole frickin' stack of them! I want one set-top box, preferably not a box at all but built into my TV, using a standardized protocol, which any supplier can unlock a
At least... (Score:2)
*DUCKS* C'mon, it's finals! +1 bad joke?:)
Re:YES (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe that fact will draw some more attention to them, but probably for the wrong reasons. Linux or not, they still suck pretty horribly.
Their boxes and the service are just a little bit too early to market. The firmware is HORRID,
Re:YES (Score:3, Funny)
BITE ME.
Re:Disney & ESPN? It'll be $49.99 in a year... (Score:2)
Re:They could do it in Santa Cruz... (Score:2, Insightful)
Basically, the FCC says your neighborhood association can place restrictions on where you put the dish, but can't prohibit its installation.
Re:They could do it in Santa Cruz... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Not another box (Score:2, Interesting)
The point is - there's such a thing as too many set-top boxes. I've got enough already. When someone starts to integrate features rather than selling me another box for each, I'll buy another. In the meantime, forget it.