K.M. Richards
Program Director, The Eighties Channel™
If that is so, then ATSC 3.0 just became the next HD Radio.
Submit a comment to them pointing out that absurdity. I posted a link earlier to ECFS.
If that is so, then ATSC 3.0 just became the next HD Radio.
Let me see if I have this straight:
* The FCC is stating it will let broadcasters shut down their ATSC 1.0 signals whenever (as soon as) they individually please ... YET:
* The FCC is also stating there will be no mandate forcing broadcasters to shut down their ATSC 1.0 broadcasts by any specific deadline?
* The FCC is further stating there will be no mandate forcing manufacturers to include ATSC 3.0 in new tuners or television sets?
If that is so, then ATSC 3.0 just became the next HD Radio.
If that is so, then ATSC 3.0 just became the next HD Radio.
And add to that, all of this Rube Goldberg business of having one or more stations in the market sacrifice their 1.0 signal to become a "lighthouse", having to parcel out their existing subchannels to other stations whose subchannels (or at least one or more of them) they carry on the 3.0 lighthouse. (And not all stations in the market normally participate.)
Sadly, there's really no other way to do it, in this interim period when 1.0 and 3.0 are attempting to coexist.
I mean, ATSC 1.0 has lots of problems. Fybush highlighted some of them on a prior page in this thread (Post #125).In brief, ATSC 3.0 is a solution in search of a problem, not the other way around.
Then, still not looking to the future, the part of the UHF band used for television was cut back -- from 56 channels to 23 -- to favor cellular telephone service (and they still aren't using all of the spectrum they were given).
At the risk of going off-topic, are you suggesting that the cell companies aren't using the spectrum? Because I absolutely disagree with that. Whatever the wireless companies own is generally in use. There was definitely a time when this was true, but that time is mostly in the past.
How true. With only 30 usable channels (VHF 2 through 6 are a non-starter, though they are used even in some major markets such as NYC and Philadelphia), there's not enough room to assign parallel ATSC 3.0 channels as there was when analog and 1.0 coexisted. We are left with, as I described it, the Rube Goldberg scenario of (usually) only having enough capacity to relay the main x.1 channel via 3.0 on a lighthouse stations, this being accomplished by one or more stations sacrificing their native 1.0 signal to be the lighthouse, while having to carve out reciprocal space for all of their subchannels on participating stations.We do not have the number of channels available anywhere but the smallest markets to do this transition as orderly as we did the first.
10% could be the difference between #1 or #3 or worse in a competitive market like local news in a lot of cities. Streaming can have "hiccups" too when the provider and the streaming company can't agree on rates.20% of an audience for linear TV that is shrinking daily.
The 20% figure is for homes with OTA that also use other sources like cable and streaming. The percentage of OTA only households got much lower than that in the past.20% of an audience for linear TV that is shrinking daily.
Doing a little math, here's the flow:In brief: from 12.9% in May 2024 to 16.3% in July 2025. Add the extra 4% of households who have OTA plus other services and you reach your current 20% figure. But the bottom line is that OTA now appears to be rebounding.
Why do you still subscribe to cable? Do you live too far from any TV stations to get them in with an antenna?Cable service is ungodly expensive. It's my second highest bill after the mortgage. My Spectrum service costs about what my property tax plus electric bill is each month.
I'm not that resident expert, but I can tell you that New Mexico has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation. When money is tight, subscriptions to TV services become a luxury.The PDF also lists markets where OTA use is abnormally high. The highest is Albuquerque-Santa Fe at 32% penetration. I wonder why this could be. Maybe the resident expert on that market (albeit in radio) knows something about the population there that could explain.
I'm not that resident expert, but I can tell you that New Mexico has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation. When money is tight, subscriptions to TV services become a luxury.
In my case yes. I tried to get a rooftop antenna installed and was told if it didn't work just send it back. Excuse me, how? I had to ask you to install it in the first place.Why do you still subscribe to cable? Do you live too far from any TV stations to get them in with an antenna?
OTA reception is minimally relevant for me, because I don't watch much programming on the OTA networks.Why do you still subscribe to cable? Do you live too far from any TV stations to get them in with an antenna?
What’s your team?OTA reception is minimally relevant for me, because I don't watch much programming on the OTA networks.
I'm a baseball fan, and Cable has been one of the very few ways to watch my team. FanDuel Sports networks now offer a direct-to-consumer streaming option, but I'm not sure that's really any more economical at $30/mo. I'll certainly re-evaluate before the start of next baseball season.