kenglish said:
And, BTW, what will happen to the "Channel 9 (on Cable)" station when the local Cable outfit goes all digital? Maybe they should step back from the channel number stuff for a while, and call themselves something different (without numbers).
Some stations, especially those that started out on UHF and have multiple cable systems in the market, do indeed do that. One of my locals is simply "Fox Rochester," for instance, and down the road a bit, WUTR in Utica is just "WUTR."
But to answer the digital-cable question...nothing will change. My local Time Warner system still has analog service, but all the analog channels are duplicated on QAM digital, and my cable box tunes to those channels instead of the analog channels. It matters not a bit to the end user - "13" is still "13," whether the box is tuned to an analog signal at 210 MHz or a digital signal at 798 MHz.
Ken notes that it would be confusing if McDonalds started selling Whoppers and BK started selling Big Macs. Indeed it would - but the real analogy to what's happening in the DTV conversion would be even more confusing. Imagine if Wendy's started selling Big Macs and McDonalds started selling some "Megaburger" nobody had ever heard of - but by the luck of the draw, BK was able to keep on selling Whoppers.
That's the kind of disruption to the established competitive balance that would result from using RF channels instead of remapping - it's one thing if EVERYONE in the market shifts, but when a few stations get to keep their existing branding they've had for decades, while others get sent up to TV Siberia, it throws a wrench into viewing patterns in a way the industry would very much like to avoid.
(Again, you're talking about businesses, small businesses in some cases, that have already been asked to spend a million dollars per station or more on new equipment, some of which will be useless again after 2/17/09, not to mention giving up hours and hours of airtime to promote the switch and running the risk of losing some viewers in the conversion process.)
And I haven't even gotten into the really confusing channel swaps like Baltimore, where the station that's been known for 62 years as "Channel 2" will be occupying the RF spectrum that's been used for 60 years by the station known as "Channel 13" - while the station known as "13" moves upstairs to UHF 38.
You'd (well, not
you, Ken, but the original poster) really say it's less confusing to have WMAR go from its established "Channel 2" to its longtime competitor's brand of "Channel 13" - while sending WJZ, the station that's been "Channel 13" since 1948, up to the unknown brand of "Channel 38" - all because some viewers' receivers (maybe 15% of total viewers) will now be tuning WJZ in at 614 MHz instead of 210 MHz and WMAR at 210 MHz instead of 54 MHz?