I say what I said, because of so many stations that are avoiding giving out any technical information at all, fearing they'll "scare" the public.
I've seen ads that feature stations' news anchors standing in front of Comcast logos (on set, no less), telling the viewers that they should just subscribe to Cable, "to avoid the hassles".
My own station's promotions people give me the "evil eye" every time I start to set up a small UHF antenna (just a little ol' DB2). They still rarely use the nice mast and rotator that I built on to their trailer. Instead, they try to hide an antenna inside the metal trailer, or put the mast off to the side someplace.
It's almost like the industry doesn't want to fool with OTA anymore. But, it's going to bite us when we have to ask permission from the Cable companies before we light up a sub-channel that many viewers can see. We could have given Cable a run for their money, with new and drastically improved technology. We have plenty of features, besides just multicasting....Electronic Program Guides (that WE can keep updated), multiple audio languages, much better Captioning options, etc. But, how do we get that message to the average viewer, if he's never seen a Digital TV work? The retailers just put a sat feed on the set, and demo it as a monitor. No way to see how the guides look, no way to tell how the set scans in new channels, no trying out the remote's channel change or audio selection functions. It's like buying a whole audio system based on how the speakers sound.
Where are the PVR-style Digital recorders for OTA channels? I guess there's too little demand for them, since "everybody will just get Cable".
Why have so few building owners invested in upgraded MATV systems? And, why do many of the ones that do anything at all, just put an NTSC video and mono sound back on-channel, and call it "good"? I don't think very many people have seen the concept of all this. It's one of those, "The FCC gave us another one of their unfunded mandates. How do we get it done THIS TIME?"
Engineers looked at the DTV Transition as a great opportunity. Too bad we couldn't get many others hyped-up about it.