Comcast Xfinity in Houston finally demapped the former channel slot for NBCSN after running the redirect loop for over a week. Have other cable systems also demapped the channel or is something else showing up where NBCSN used to be?
On Spectrum (New York), the channel where MSNBC was has the following message:Comcast Xfinity in Houston finally demapped the former channel slot for NBCSN after running the redirect loop for over a week. Have other cable systems also demapped the channel or is something else showing up where NBCSN used to be?
Did you mean NBCSN? In any case it's the same with Spectrum in Jackson, TN.On Spectrum (New York), the channel where MSNBC was has the following message:
"Programming on this network is no longer available."
Sorry, I meant NBCSN. Yes, long abbreviations with similarities (in this case, NBC) can be confusing at times.Did you mean NBCSN? In any case it's the same with Spectrum in Jackson, TN.
At last, Spectrum (at least in Los Angeles) has demapped the channel formerly occupied by NBCSN as of this past Wednesday. It no longer appears in my EPG nor is it tunable.On Spectrum (New York), the channel where MSNBC was has the following message:
"Programming on this network is no longer available."
Same here in New York.At last, Spectrum (at least in Los Angeles) has demapped the channel formerly occupied by NBCSN as of this past Wednesday. It no longer appears in my EPG nor is it tunable.
If the advisory is an actual video stream it would take up a very tiny amount of bandwidth since it is a static, unchanging graphic. On Xfinity these are usually white text on a black background. Xfinity usually leaves these up for around a week before demapping the channel.Side note: I often wonder if the “Programming on this network is no longer available” slate that shows up on a defunct channel still takes up bandwidth as if it were still an active channel. Can anyone here shed light on whether or not that’s true?