Sorting Through the Analog to Digital TV Mess 798
H_Fisher writes "CNN offers an article from Fortune magazine, giving a look at the problems surrounding the mandatory switch from analog to digital TV in the U.S., now slated for 2009. 'Managing this transition -- which will render about 70 million TV sets obsolete -- will be not be easy,' Marc Gunther writes. Among the problems: millions of American households without cable or satellite access will lose free access to news and weather along with the rest of their broadcast fare. Uncle Sam's solution? 'Yes, the very same federal government that is cutting back on college loans and food stamps will soon be issuing TV vouchers' - $1.5 billion to help U.S. households buy new digital TV equipment."
Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:2, Interesting)
Let's not forget:
To be sure, the transition will facilitate a lot of progress for both the tech industry and the public sector. Once TV stations switch to digital transmission, they will return to the government a big chunk of the radio spectrum they currently use to transmit their analog channels.
Some of
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
!"increasing as much as planned" != "cutting back"
Of course, it is a
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, I thought about pointing that out, too, but that quote was actually from the Fortune article itself [cnn.com].
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
Pretend the following:
Your job is to provide 1 apple to every student each day. It is 2005 and apples cost 50 cents. You have 200 students. The 2005 government budget has given you $100 dollars a day to do the job. You can do your job and have no problems. You serve 100% of the students.
The government forecasts that in 2006, apples will cost 60 cents and increases in enrollment will give you 220 students. Because it knows that these are just projections, the government projects a 2006 budget for you of $140 a day, 40% increase in budget, but you should be able to do your job with a little money to spare. You still serve 100% of the students.
When it comes time to actually pass the budget, the government gives you a budget of $125 a day budget, a 25% increase over this year's budget. However, government projections of prices and enrollments were on target. Apples now cost 60 cents and you have to provide apples for 220 students each day.
You can only purchase 208 applies, which means that 12 students are no longer covered.
Did your budget increase? Yes.
Did you cut back on the percentage of students you can serve and the services you offer? Yes.
Thus not increasing by as much as planned does equal cutting back.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
Lets not even get into how you will frequently run out of apples while waiting for multiple competitive bids from apple suppliers. Then you must make sure that the apple supply contracts are handed to vendors in the proper legislative districts so you will have the votes you need.
special consideration to 'disadvantaged' apple suppliers
Invironmental impact studies
Gotta make sure you pay the fairtrade apple rate
and so on...
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Prove it. I think you "typically" generalize without two facts to stand on.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Informative)
The per student amount of loans available was raised considerably. The artifically low interest rates subsidized by the government were allowed to rise a couple percent, but with the benefit of becoming fixed instead of variable. Interest rates in the US have been rising recently, you might also note.
Any student who is currently eligible for a student loan w
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
The original poster was correct. An increase in spending is an increase in spending. Not spending as much as someone wants to be spent is NOT a decrease in spending.... the amount of money being spen
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Wrong, because I guarantee that the above number is based on spectrum space now.
Spectrum space commands such a high price because it is limited right now. Open up the supply, with the same demand, and price goes down. This is economics 101.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, the estimates on spectrum auction proceeds take this into account.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Insightful)
Forget college, forget healthcare, we need radio bandwidth and tax cuts for the richest to help fight the terrorists.
Sickening.
80 years ago people were expected to read Shakespear in the 4th grade, now we (MAYBE) get into it by high school. We've been dumbed down folks, and if you don't think TV played a large part in that, well, you watch too much TV...
"Shakspear" (Score:3, Interesting)
http://shakespeareauthorship.com/name1.html [shakespear...orship.com]
So any close spelling is really legitimate.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
Second, the upper 1% control far more than 1% of the wealth or income. The only way to get the upper 1% to control only 1% of income is to have perfect equality. In practice, the number is more like the top 1% controlling around 50% of the wealth. Even under a flat tax, their fair tax burden would be around 50% of total taxes paid. Anything less is a regressive tax regime.
What happens is that the poor pay fairly high rates (probably around 20%-30% of income) because they are still responsible for the social security tax (11% or so once you include the employer portion), sales tax, tolls, and sin taxes (gasoline, cigarettes, alcohol). The middle class pay a similar amount, with a higher nominal rate being offset by fat mortgage deductions, better tax preparers, and far less sin taxes and tolls. Even without breaking any laws, rich people will pay less taxes because they essentially pay no sales, tolls, or sin taxes and they often shop around for lower tax countries to park their money. Capital is also favorably treated, and most of their income comes from capital.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Interesting)
http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=2
While the Top 20% may pay 60% of the tax, they hold 80% of the wealth.
The bottom 50% hold less than 5%.
So maybe the tax burden on the top 20% should be a little higher, as they are currently being taxed at a low rate in proportion to their benefit.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3)
We need to stop trying to make things "fair". Instead of punishing the rich for being rich, maybe we should think about helping the poor. Instead of raising the taxes on the high
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Interesting)
"Wealth" is very different from "Income" while "Consumption" is very different from both. Taxes can be levied on any of the three items (or others of course).
The current U.S. personal tax system primarily taxes "Income" (income tax) and, to a lesser extent, "Consumption" (as in sales tax and "luxury" taxes).
The only significant personal "Wealth" tax in the U.S. that comes to mind is property tax. Generally property tax is very progressive - the poorest pay little direct property tax (they tend to rent or live in low cost housing) while consuming the bulk of the benefits (subsidized public health programs, transportation, and education) and the highest income individuals tend to pay high direct property taxes (since they tend to live in expensive homes and own businesses) and reap few if any of the direct benefits (they pay for their own health care [and more], rarely use public transportation [except for politicians who want to make a point], and send their children to private school).
So, what is the "fairest" thing to tax? The usual claim of "unfairness" in the U.S. system of taxation seems to, at the root, be that individuals who enjoy a lot of creature comforts don't pay their "fair" share compared to individuals who have a minimum of creature comforts. It turns out, these creature comforts are a direct result of consumption, not income or wealth.
The only way to substantially enjoy ones wealth is to spend (i.e., consume) it - if you have $1B USD in corporate bonds and stocks and spend only $20K a year, your lifestyle is not much different from a fairly low paid worker BUT your $1B is helping create and sustain jobs. Sure, you're getting a revenue stream from your investment, but obviously less than what someone else thought the assets were worth (else there would have been no willing sellers of the stock you own or willing borrowers of your money) and your lifestyle is not improved by this revenue stream. This investment revenue stream must just be being plowed back into creating and sustaining more jobs (unless you're a horrible investor!) since at most $20K/year is being consumed for creature comforts. Sure, you have a greater feeling of "well being" because you have money for a rainy day which the fairly low paid worker doesn't - but taxing "feelings of well being" seems odd (presumably that would result in taxing those who follow a religion since a feeling of "well being" is something that most religions tout either explicitly or implicitly and would also result in very rich, but emotionally depressed, people paying no taxes).
Consider two single developers working side by side at similar jobs and both earning a salary of $75K/year (for the moment, ignore taxes since "appropriate taxation" is the issue we are addressing):
The second (call them "Mr. HighRoller") spends $75K/year ($25K for a nice apartment, $50K for other stuff) and always has a nice current model year car, a high end HD TV not more than three years old, the best of cable TV packages, and a wardrobe full of the latest designer labels. Since there is no "remaining" money, HighRoller saves or invests nothing.
After working for 45 years, Frugal has well in excess of $2.25M (inflation adjusted of course and assuming the investments were not too stupid) and retires comfortably - never requiring a penny of public assistance. On the other hand, HighRoller retires with NOTHING (except rapidly depreciating designer clothes, HDTV set, and high end car) and ends up living on Social Security
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Insightful)
These people are leaches on the system. It has nothing to do with who's being taxed. As the GP said, the top %5 pay the majority of the tax dollars already, both in total $$ and % of income. That the type of people you mentioned exist is a sad fact of human nature and the kama system hopefully will get them, but for each one of them there is a John Chambers (CEO, cisco) who lowered his pay (to $1.00 IIRC) to help the company save money and to up morale for his employees, there is a Craig Barret, who durring the downturn took a 75% pay hit because that is what was fair, and there are others just like them. These guys (and those like them) pay 40% of the federal government bankroll and are GoodPeople(tm).
[/rant]
-nB
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's see. Say you have a married couple - perhaps two people who both work as professionals in IT or some other area that they had to go to school to tackle. Between them, they make $250k a year before taxes, working probably 70-80 hours a week each at least. Unlike the low-income people you're talking about (who pay NO taxes), these two people have a very large chunk of their income har
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Insightful? How could this utter crap be modded insightful? Incite-full would be more like it. Oh, and wrong, too. I'm in the upper middle class you talk about. I have a house, a couple cars, and all that. I pay less than 20% in d
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Who's fault is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why can't they get one good job?
Even if they have a "good" job, why are they still living check-to-check?
In this country(USA), all of these boil down to personal choices.
Yes, they chose to drop out of school.
Yes, they chose to have sex when they couldn't afford it.
Yes, they chose to buy fancy wheels for their otherwise beat up car rather than save for the future(any future, their own, their kids', any).
The list goes on and except fo
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
If we converted to digital and left the poorest of our nation out in the cold, we'd devolve into some discussion about how the evil government was depriving the weakest among us from access to a free press, possibly even with a few stats peppered in about how TV is even more important for them because of illiteracy rates, and so on, and maybe some good socialism arguments to boot.
But when we DO help them, it's, of course, a conspiracy to spread propaganda and keep everyone under their thumbs! (After all, network television is nothing more than a propaganda mouthpiece for the government!)
You guys are the best.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Insightful)
News flash: groups composed of many people from all over the world don't all think alike! What a concept!
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Insightful)
But when we DO help them [something contradictory to above]
This particular posting doesn't out-and-out accuse We Slashdotters of hypocrisy, but that's the strong implication. How can anyone be so stupid to accuse a group of people of hypocrisy, especially a group claiming no political or ideological uniformity of its members?
Yes, there's probably a plausible explanation, but I don't really care. The 'you guys said one thing before and another thing later and the moderators agreed, you all are hypocrites' argument is retarded.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:4, Insightful)
http://today.reuters.com/News/newsArticle.aspx?ty
I don't know about you, but I'm not a big fan of that.
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:2)
Re:Damned if you do, damned if you don't (Score:5, Insightful)
"We" do? Personally, I'm still complaining about needing to switch to begin with. Between the government-mandated switch, the push for the broadcast flag, and now these new pork vouchers, I find nothing to be happy about with the entire process.
Talk about missing the point (Score:2)
Going digital is the number one thing that will finally force major investment in symmetrical broadband, IP multicast, and other technologies that will appear extremely attractive for content providers. And guess what? Everyone else can piggyback on those networks.
What kind of networks do you think will be used for transmission? Magic?
Think "IP".
Not to mention that going digital will actually be a net gain for us, from an economic standpoint (spectrum auction) and otherwise
Oh come on now! (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not fair. Surely protecting the priceless "inter-lickual propretty" is more important than little things like eating and education. Where are your priorities? Your sense of ethics? Your campaign contributions?
Re:Oh come on now! (Score:2)
Re:Oh come on now! (Score:3, Insightful)
Really, does it even matter anymore at this point?
College vs. TV (Score:5, Insightful)
You can (Score:5, Informative)
Air Force enlisted men are smarter than (Score:3, Insightful)
Would $40 really help your college fund? (Score:3, Informative)
Great, do that and see if it can help your reading skills.
They're not giving you help to buy a digital TV, they're giving $40 for a converter box so you can watch a crappy old analog TV with a nice digital signal. Would $40 really help your college fund?
Not individually. (Score:4, Insightful)
But put $1.5 billion more into scholarships and such and I can guarantee that more students will get a college education.
Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:5, Informative)
You will NOT have to replace your antenna, what you will need to get is an external converter to turn the signals from your antenna into something your current TV can handle.
Re:Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:2)
We just bought a nice 40" HDTV, and our old antenna pulls down Over-The-Air HD broadcasts just fine. In fact, we get better quality from OTA than we do from our Dish Network box, because the satellite box does a D to A conversion (yes, I know I need to buy the HD sat reciever and spend the extra $5/mo to fix this).
Re:Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:2)
Uhm, because there's a lot involved with converting a HD signal to a standard pronged/coax/component signal. HD is digital, so you need a decoder (in addition to the demondulator). Currently the prices for such a box is about $200 (I think, this was a while ago). The hope is that by the time standard definition gets turned off, the boxes will be
Re:Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:2)
I don't know why one would need (or even want) the converter box built into the antenna, as you've suggested. At a minimum, it's probably going to re
Re:Are you fucking kidding me? (Score:3, Insightful)
There is no such thing as a "HD Antenna". UHF/VHF antennas can be used to watch Digital OTA broadcasts, in theory. There's a whole other question about the quality of the signal as received by the antenna- those rabbit ears probably won't work very wekk. A weak analog signal results in a snowy picture-- it's low quality but watchable. A weak digita
question for /.ers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:question for /.ers (Score:2)
Re:question for /.ers (Score:2)
Bread and Circus (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a reason why the Romans didn't talk about "Bread, Circus and Higher Education". As long as people are fat and happy, you can basically do whatever you want. Large business know this. The shills they put in government know this. And we know this too.
'Yes, the very same federal government...' (Score:4, Insightful)
I realize this is in an 'analysis' piece, but I would be very surprised if it were actually true. Unless by cutting back, he means cutting back in the rate of growth. I'm not even going to attempt to Google this to find meaningful figures, for (I hope) obvious reasons. Anyone know where we can see the real increases/decreases for funding of such items?
Re:'Yes, the very same federal government...' (Score:3, Insightful)
I realize this is in an 'analysis' piece, but I would be very surprised if it were actually true. Unless by cutting back, he means cutting back in the rate of growth.
Neither is true. Anyone who tries to criticize the current administration for spending less on anything is either ill-informed or has been living in a box for the past 6 years. During George W. Bush's term in office, Federal spending has increased at a rate opposite of free fall. Its one of the things that many conservatives like myself f
TV is necessary for Government (Score:2, Interesting)
1) The billions the government can rake in in radio frequency auctions
2) Continuance of a medium to keep the unwashed masses under control.
Take a look at the UK... (Score:2, Insightful)
Set top boxes cost from as little as £30 for terrestrial thus meaning those 70 million analogue TVs will be good for years to come.
What happened to the free market? (Score:3, Insightful)
Add to that the landfill mess this looks to cause. That's a LOT of analog TVs that go to essentially worthless in very short order. We're already dealing with too much computer waste going into the landfills, and now the US is going to legislate putting a very large pile of still functioning and capable televisions in there all at once?
Brilliant. Special interest groups at work again in the legislature it would seem.
Re:What happened to the free market? (Score:5, Informative)
You don't have to junk the TV, just get a digital receiver and then plug it into your current TV.
Re:What happened to the free market? (Score:3, Informative)
Analog TV transmitters, on the other hand, will probably be mostly useless. Most antenna towers do
Re:What happened to the free market? (Score:2)
The spectrum I can see to some degree, but I'm curious as to why it isn't shut down in pieces. There's a LOT of bandwidth in there, and you can trim the broadcast spectrum a chunk of channels at a time without causing a bit pile of chaos. This is to launch the digital TV market with larger mass, which is just commercial interest. That will cause it to take longer for the market to become efficient and competitive in theory. In practice, it's just more
Crazy catch 22 (Score:2)
In the Bay Area (Score:3, Interesting)
The San Francisco Bay Area the digital transition will not work without a lot of upgrading on peoples part.
There are multiple transmission locations for TV in the Bay Area. This basically means that unless you have one of those monster antennas on your roof you will need an antenna pointed in the direction of the transmissions. Think multiple antennas. Multiple friends of mine have multiple antennas.
Not only that, but from all accounts of those already trying to receive digital transimissions, including myself, digital signals simply do not travel as far.
Or perhaps lets put it another way, the signal may travel just as far as a current day signal, but at the ranges quite a few people in the SF Bay Area are at from the transmission tower the signal is too weak to register within the digital TV receiver to be accurately display. Thus, either you get a perfect signal (or picture if you will) or you get nothing at all. And a lot more people, including myself, are getting nothing at all on my HDTV since I'm just far enough away that the signal seems to be too weak. And I live in the San Jose area, 30 or so miles from San Francisco as the bird flys.
Lastly, quite a few people in the east of SF live in quite mountainous conditions. Cannot pick up things there either.
Re:In the Bay Area (Score:3, Informative)
television serves the interests of the state (Score:3, Insightful)
In our current system of government, the greatest danger to the existing power structure is voting. A better educated populace is more likely to vote, while a TV watching populace is less likely to do so. So it is in the interests of the state to do what it can to discourage education beyond the minimum level necessary to support the state. Hence the emphasis on putting lots of dollars into extending the reach and influence of TV.
Re:television serves the interests of the state (Score:3, Interesting)
You're on the right track there.
"In our current system of government, the greatest danger to the existing power structure is voting."
I disagree. The democratic state relies almost entirely on masses of selfish people voting. It's so much easier to keep their power by pandering to the ignorant 70% than by demonstrating true merit to the smarter 30%. All they have to do is promise each large demographic that they'll give them a bunch
news? (Score:2, Insightful)
What the? (Score:5, Interesting)
This really gives some credit to the theory that the primary purpose of television is to pacify people and have them forget the real problems they face.
Not really that bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Regardless of your feeleings on television, it is important that everyone have free (or near free) access to news, state of the union addresses, etc.
Re:Not really that bad (Score:2, Troll)
The net gain ($10b - $1.5b) for Halliburton would still be a revenue influx of $8.5b.
fixed.
Great... (Score:2)
That being said, If it's only going to be "earmarked" for vouchers, and not blindly spent... the $21.43 that is spent on replacing each of those those 70 million sets will have a decent economic impact... I would just rather see that money being spen
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Too little attention is paid to the illegal activity that goes on in subsidized housing in my community... Someone needs to be down there to say, "You own $5,000 worth of new electronics, move out and get an apartment." It's their money to spend... but t
Set-top box? (Score:5, Informative)
Only the really old sets don't have SCART sockets now, and although suitable boxes with RF Out exist they are more expensive.
Re:Set-top box? (Score:3, Interesting)
Same here (Score:3, Interesting)
We're using DVB-T here like most Restoftheworldians. AFAIK, North America adopted ATSC which uses a different modulation technique. Maybe that's the r
Re:Same here (Score:4, Informative)
DVB-T uses COFDM which uses hundreds or thousands of carriers at different frequencies that change amplitude slowly. On the other hand, ATSC uses a single carrier amplitude modulated very quickly (VSB modulated, technically). Thus small time differences due to multipath are not a problem for COFDM, but are a problem for 8-VSB modulation of ATSC. The new chips have extensive time-domain equalizers to handle multipath.
On the other hand, there was evidence that 8-VSB provides a greater coverage area with less power. Power costs are a major issue for television transmitters.
The other issue is that ATSC includes high-definition, while European DVB-T systems don't (as far as I know). Hi-def decoders are a bit more complex than standard-def decoders.
Why set any regulations or standards by force? (Score:3, Insightful)
First, setting a regulatory standard for television broadcasts and forcing the industry to adhere to them is no longer necessary -- when TV was new, I can understand government enforcing a standard. With technology changing monthly, letting the market figure out what is needed is the best solution.
To me, this seems to be simple cronyism by the State. By creating these standards, they're creating a high cost to entry in the video broadcast market. The quicker we see broadband hit the homes, the more I realize that broadcast television is a complete waste of space. Deregulating ALL broadcast television and letting the frequencies be used by wireless broadcasters would make much more sense to me. Can you imagine how cheap and how fast wireless would be if we gave up all those megahertz?
Broadcasting isn't even important: people want video on demand (whether by cable, satellite, ThePirateBay, or PVR). Broadcasting isn't even efficient anymore: advertisers prefer knowing exact numbers rather than "we think we hit 700,000 with this show." In the long run, Congress and the FCC are applying ideas from 1970 to technology that could change 20 times in the next 20 years. Why restrict it?
I say it is time to just ignore these guys -- if big TV broadcasters want to continue to make a mess and force the little guy out of the business, let them. We'll counter it with rebroadcaster their garbage over BitTorrent and through the sharing of information as it was meant to be: free. Take the infinite supply of data versus the finite demand and you end up with a cost of zero.
Re:Why set any regulations or standards by force? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because we let them. They do not have any power that we as a people don't grant to them. Luckily for them, that granting of power can be passive, since voter apathy about issues that truly matter to our freedoms (not the abortion and gay-marriage shoutfests) is at an all time high.
First, setting a regulatory standard for television broadca
Oblig. Simpsons (Score:3, Funny)
A phased approach would be better (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:A phased approach would be better (Score:3, Interesting)
5 or more years before analog broadcasts end, no more analog only sets can be sold.
2 years from the drop dead date, only pure digital sets are sold.
That way, most sets convert to digital through the natural replacement cycle. Further, new purchasers, who are generally more affluent, bear the brunt of the broadcast switch over.
Good. (Score:2)
HD antenna's are as cheap as 15$ ... untill the receivers get that low.. I'll stay with analog.
The revolution will not be televised (Score:2)
Or at least major urban riots in the summer of '09.
TV vouchers (Score:2)
At a very simplified level that's a perfect description of how it's done.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Government of the TV, by the TV and for the TV (Score:4, Insightful)
The analog-to-digital crisis--nothing that requires emergency expenditures of billions is not a crisis--points up TV's supremacy in American life. Those screens dare not go blank, even for a moment. It is from TV that Americans take proper instruction in the backstabbing rituals of the I Got Mine society ("reality TV"), learn to fear the system's guardians (cops and courtroom dramas), routinely covet what they can't afford (advertising) and get hallucinatory reassurance from square-jawed automatons ("news"). For the dwindling few who still watch such things, it's also where the marionette-in-chief periodically appears on glistening guide wires to rattle off his sermons.
If Congress didn't help lift the declining middle and growing Wal-Mart classes into the digital age, there'd be trouble. You can't run a nation into debt servitude, steal its liberties, mire it in futile (and feudal) distant wars, corrode its health and environment, leave it to drown in natural disasters, and force it to work longer hours all while presiding over historical levels of official corruption if you also hide the electronic teat. Baby, as every momma knows, wants milk.
Bread and Circuses (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone mention the obvious? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you RTFA you will see that the government will be selling off the spectrum used by analog tv for an estimated 10 billion dollars... Hence, spending a small portion of that to facilitate the switch still leaves them with a 8.5 BILLION DOLLAR profit.
So can we please not have any more stupid posts about increased spending, when this deal is entirely designed to make money, not spend it. 8.5 billion will be made almost immediately, with a likely increase in other technologies boosting the economy in the long run as a direct effect.
On a side note, I'd love to see any conversation about this move to digital being driven, in part, by the ease of applying DRM to a digital signal.
only on /. (Score:3, Informative)
Anyone else interested in seeing the person that actually modded this +5 Interesting? Lets not forget that In fact, the percentage of GDP spent on health is higher in the United States than in countries with government-provided health care [mediamatters.org] and the government pays over 300 billion a year in grants towards college [state.gov].
Heaven forbid we spent 1/200 of that on television. Crazy liberal whiners.
Magic money! 10 billion from thin air. (Score:3, Insightful)
Where do people think that 10 billion comes from? It's a tax. A very sneaky one, but a tax nonetheless. You'll be paying extra for all the resulting new technology. Or, worse still, the technology won't arrive because the companies paid a ridiculous amount in the auction. We've seen something like that in the UK with mobile phone spectrum. See the first paragraph of this editorial [www.ebu.ch].
So, please, don't talk about the switchover as if it produces money. It doesn't, it's just a tax that people aren't smart enough to complain about.
Misunderstanding relationships (Score:5, Insightful)
Television is not provided gratis to the viewing public out of the generosity of some media mogul's heart (or space formerly therefore).
Television is a MEANS of delivering viewer eyeballs to advertiser content. They 'bait' you with 24 minutes of programming per half hour, and then hope you don't notice that they 'switch' to advertising for at least 6 minutes. (Admittedly, lately they've gotten more subtle about the switch part by using product placement, and cheapened the bait with 'Reality' TV, but the principle's the same.)
Hi-def will be a way for these companies to put out more attractive bait. (OK, actually what happened was that the digital compression algorithms have allowed them to squeeze more analog signals into the allowed bandwidth, more like dropping LOTS of shitty-baited hooks in the water instead of something particularly attractive. Gov't is mandating that they use only the 'pretty bait'.)
So could someone explain to me why the US gov't is subsidising a privately owned and MASSIVELY profit-generating product delivery system?
FactCheck! (Score:3, Informative)
They can't handle their customer base (Score:3, Insightful)
There are old buildings with old wires, and as the signal strength decreases before it gets to the TV set (or converter box), the loss of signal will create all kinds of glitches.
Bad taps in lock boxes in basements can cause signal breakup, loss of signal entirely, and all manner of artifacting, including, but not limited to extreme pixelation of the image and audio degradation to the point of inaudibility.
In short; the cable companies could find themselves having to re-wire a large percentage of inner-urban areas where the loss of TV entirely for large percentages of the population could even lead to riots.
Worst is that they are in for a surprise when it still won't work because of other equipment failures between their origination point and the destination box.
The cable companies, used to short-changing their customer base and providing the lowest service at the higest prices, will suddenly find itself in the unenviable position of actually having to do WORK to make it all happen. And they aren't going to want to pay for it, having already spent their government subsidies on yachts for the upper executives.
In short, they aren't ready to handle even their existing customer base.
Unrealistic expectations (Score:3, Insightful)
That means duplication or replacement of most existing public safety radio equipment. Since the departments barely have the budgets to maintain the existing systems, where will the money come from to buy, install, and maintain all the new ones? Interoperability was a goal even before 9/11. It still hasn't happened because nobody is willing to pay for it. New spectrum won't help without the equipment to use it.
The rest of the spectrum will be auctioned off to the highest bidders -- probably tech companies. The sale of this valuable, scarce real estate is expected to bring in about $10 billion, maybe more. That will help reduce the federal budget deficit...Scheduled for 2008, the auction will be the biggest spectrum sale since a 1994-95 spectrum auction. That sale helped boost the mobile phone industry, boosting the number of cell phone subscribers in the U.S. from 24 million to 200 million. It also helped drive down the cost of wireless minutes from an average of 47 cents a minute to 9 cents a minute, according to analysis from financial services firm Stifel Nicolaus.
First, recall the huge expenditures needed for new public safety radio equipment. That alone is likely to consume all the auction revenue.
Second, recall the telcom bust that followed the '94-'95 land grab. The survivors remember the financial bloodbath that resulted from that bidding war, and are unlikely to spend so profligately again. The principle of supply and demand strongly suggests that declining air-time prices are symptoms of excess capacity. Why would the telcoms pay billions for more, when they need huge discounts to sell what they already have?
Re:Why is this a problem? (Score:2)
Re:Why is this a problem? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why is this a problem? (Score:2)
Re:Why is this a problem? (Score:3, Informative)
Or you can use a good tv torrent [eztvefnet.org] site and watch the programs without commercials the night they air (possible even before broadcast time if you live on the west coast). I really do not think that all the effort to switch to a new sort of television is worth it. The computer is becoming the wholistic entertainment center for the household: Music, games, movies, now television. So
Re:Why is this a problem? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:$1.5B is chump change... (Score:2)
Re:Radio still works (Score:2)
People with cable don't need OTA digital tuners, mr. smart guy.
Re:Oh, the stupidity. (Score:3, Insightful)
No, the government is making an estimated $10 billion on the deal (auctioning the spectrum), and has decided to allocate some of that money to help people out. Tell me what's wrong with that?
3) FTA, Sets hooked up to cable or satellite services should work fine no matter what. This means that coax input