ixnay said:Did politics or technology have the lion's share to do with the early 1950s freeze on new TV licenses? I've never understood.
ixnay
fortmill said:My question is, what was the maximum power allowed for UHF at the time? I thought I read somewhere it was only about 360,000 watts. Was that an artifical ceiling, or was that the best that equipment of the day could produce?
genius said:The most idiotic move made by the FCC in dealing with the UHF spectrum was not requiring TV sets to carry it until 1964 which at the time the only way a UHF station could surivive was to be in a market with stations all in the UHF band. Had the FCC done that earlier, it is possible the experimental UHF stations CBS, NBC and DuMont had owned could have succeeded, making UHF viable in the 50s not the late 70s/early 80s. But no, the FCC has shown us over the years they're more concerned about the non-technical, almost trival aspects.
Mark said:I know in Chicago WBKB did it with an ad "From Channel 4 to Channel 7." And WBBM did a small ad too. CBS now on Channel 2.
Mark said:I know in Chicago WBKB did it with an ad "From Channel 4 to Channel 7." And WBBM did a small ad too. CBS now on Channel 2.
Some things seem political, like Washington DC and Los Angeles NOT having a VHF station reserved for educational, where the FCC seemed pretty adament about it elsewhere.
But some allocations were stupid, did they really think a channel 7 could go in Wilmington, with a channel 7 in New York City and Washington DC?
I imagine once DTV takes hold the FCC will have to a bunch of changes, well a few anyway.
From my readings it seemed the government was pretty much set on two networks NBC and CBS and open to everything else, from community TV channels to pay TV.
But it isn't hard to see how certain decisions were made on behalf of the politcians.
ercjncpr said:It will be interesting to see how stations promo the sign off of their analog signals and the switch to DTV, this time around
w9wi said:ercjncpr said:It will be interesting to see how stations promo the sign off of their analog signals and the switch to DTV, this time around
The 2009 change will affect a lot fewer viewers.
Firstly, anyone with cable or satellite will continue to receive the stations they're receiving now, on the same TV, on the same channel. Nothing is going to move.
Secondly, if you're watching an over-the-air digital signal, the station will transmit data that tells your TV what channel to tell you you're watching. You might punch "4" on the remote control, see your TV tell you you're watching channel 4; all the graphics on the station may say channel 4, and the anchors may tell you you're watching Channel 4 News -- but the station will actually be transmitting on, and your TV will be tuned to, channel 28. While the station will, in fact, move from channel 4 to channel 28 on February 17, 2009, as far as you, the viewer, is concerned, the station is still on channel 4.
w9wi said:ercjncpr said:It will be interesting to see how stations promo the sign off of their analog signals and the switch to DTV, this time around
The 2009 change will affect a lot fewer viewers.
Firstly, anyone with cable or satellite will continue to receive the stations they're receiving now, on the same TV, on the same channel. Nothing is going to move.
Secondly, if you're watching an over-the-air digital signal, the station will transmit data that tells your TV what channel to tell you you're watching. You might punch "4" on the remote control, see your TV tell you you're watching channel 4; all the graphics on the station may say channel 4, and the anchors may tell you you're watching Channel 4 News -- but the station will actually be transmitting on, and your TV will be tuned to, channel 28. While the station will, in fact, move from channel 4 to channel 28 on February 17, 2009, as far as you, the viewer, is concerned, the station is still on channel 4.