joesixpack said:
I appreciate all the advice that's been given on this thread, but the fact is,DTV is simply too much of a hassle for regular folks to deal with. Before, all you had to do was buy your TV (which usually came with rabbit ears), and then just plug in the TV to the wall and the antenna to your TV and you were ready to go. You might get a fuzzy picture now and then, but most of the time it was perfectly watchable.
In some cases, yes, but not in all. If you lived in an area that could receive stations from multiple markets, or in an area where not all the stations were in the same general location, then you had to futz with a rotator and hope that it didn't mess up the station your wife was watching.
In the early days of TV, getting a decent picture involved many of the same issues that we have with digital TV today, especially on UHF. Snow and ghosts were the bane of TV watchers back in the days of low-powered transmitters and clunky, insensitive tuners - especially the UHF radio dials before the mid '70s. Today, it's pixellation and disappearing signals.
Both digital and analog signals require good tuners and good antennas. A $40 converter box and a $10 pair of rabbit ears ain't gonna cut it in most cases. Plus, actual knowledge of how to work with this new system is necessary. If people aren't willing to engage their brain cells and/or get their fat rear end off the couch and do some actual semi-physical labor to make it work, I don't have much sympathy for them.
Now, with the DTV "improvement",you are forced to get a converter box and a digital antenna, that may or may not work. If/when it doesn't work, you have to go out and buy an outdoor antenna, and even THEN it might not work all the time. If you don't have the antenna in the absolute perfect spot, your reception will be horrible. Even then, if the wind blows on it, you can completely lose the signal.
So the convenience of being able to just sit down and watch TV is gone, since you may have to constantly be getting up and adjusting and readjusting your antenna, not to mention the time spent on the internet researching the correct positions to put your antenna, or even if you have the correct antenna to begin with. This is not an improvement over analog, no matter how clear the picture is or how great the sound is.
You had to do that with analog TV as well in many cases. If you're not willing to put forth the effort or are unwilling to pay a professional to put forth that effort, then that's your problem.
It is, by definition, an improvement over analog. But it does take some doing, knowledge, and flat-out work in some cases, to get that improved picture. Is the system buggy and was it poorly tested? Absolutely. Its faults are well-documented.
But so was the old 525-line analog system for its first 35 or so years of existence. Anyone who remembers radio-dial brain-dead UHF tuners, VHF tuners that would get "scratchy" after a year or two of use, horizontal hold controls, weak and dying tubes, low-gain two-bay VHF antennas fed by cheap 300 ohm twin lead that got very lossy in the rain, and color control adjustments for each station will attest to that. Most of those bugs weren't fixed until the mid-'70s - on a system that was first authorized in 1941, added UHF in 1952, and color in 1954!
I'm willing to pay for the convenience of cable TV. I get more channels, perfect picture and sound, and I never have to get up and adjust anything.
That's your choice. The $70 I paid for my antenna is a lot cheaper than close to $100 a month for 200 channels, probably 190 of which I'll never watch. I shut my cable off a year and a half ago and, outside of ESPN, Fox Sports Net, and CNN, I don't miss it one bit. Some people will always need cable or satellite due to their circumstances, but poor over-the-air signals was why cable TV was invented in the first place.