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#31
posted to rec.boats
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OT Digital Converter Boxes
On Jan 7, 1:09*pm, wrote:
On Jan 7, 11:21*am, wrote: On Wed, 7 Jan 2009 05:38:24 -0800 (PST), wrote: It'll work. The only thing that the going digital thing will affect is if you use an antenna. What I'm ****ed about is that now the History Channel has went to digital format, the only way you can get it is with the Comcast box. Only have one on the main TV, all the other TV's are just wired directly to cable. I really believe soon we will be getting content like "history" and "discovery" directly from the internet with the cable company only providing bandwidth. If guys like the Mythbusters could get us to pay a dime an episode for the download they would make more money than they do through the network and cable company distribution with very little cost to them. That's true. I'm having a little trouble understanding the thing with the History channel. They went digital, so I get no signal unless it goes through Comcast's box. Any other TV doesn't get it. BUT, when all cable goes digital, it's not supposed to affect the cable ready TV's. What's up with that? Hey loogy for brains, is there a reason we can't have an OT in front of this? You somehow think it's boating related? |
#32
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
On Jan 7, 1:09*pm, wrote:
On Jan 7, 11:21*am, wrote: On Wed, 7 Jan 2009 05:38:24 -0800 (PST), wrote: It'll work. The only thing that the going digital thing will affect is if you use an antenna. What I'm ****ed about is that now the History Channel has went to digital format, the only way you can get it is with the Comcast box. Only have one on the main TV, all the other TV's are just wired directly to cable. I really believe soon we will be getting content like "history" and "discovery" directly from the internet with the cable company only providing bandwidth. If guys like the Mythbusters could get us to pay a dime an episode for the download they would make more money than they do through the network and cable company distribution with very little cost to them. That's true. I'm having a little trouble understanding the thing with the History channel. They went digital, so I get no signal unless it goes through Comcast's box. Any other TV doesn't get it. BUT, when all cable goes digital, it's not supposed to affect the cable ready TV's. What's up with that? "Digital" is a misnomer really. Before congress sold out to China to force everyone to buy new TV's (Y2K hoax all over again), cable companies used the word "digital" to make pay channels sound better.. In fact, all cable signals are "Digital". But to the cable companies "digital" was a way of sorting out the good channels so they could make them "premium" which is what they really should have called them.. Of course that would have come off just as phony as their claim that "Sattelite" providers are resold, have you ever gone by a "cable" office and seen all the sattelite dishes in front |
#33
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
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#34
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
On Jan 7, 1:27*pm, hk wrote:
wrote: On Jan 7, 1:09 pm, wrote: On Jan 7, 11:21 am, wrote: On Wed, 7 Jan 2009 05:38:24 -0800 (PST), wrote: It'll work. The only thing that the going digital thing will affect is if you use an antenna. What I'm ****ed about is that now the History Channel has went to digital format, the only way you can get it is with the Comcast box. Only have one on the main TV, all the other TV's are just wired directly to cable. I really believe soon we will be getting content like "history" and "discovery" directly from the internet with the cable company only providing bandwidth. If guys like the Mythbusters could get us to pay a dime an episode for the download they would make more money than they do through the network and cable company distribution with very little cost to them. That's true. I'm having a little trouble understanding the thing with the History channel. They went digital, so I get no signal unless it goes through Comcast's box. Any other TV doesn't get it. BUT, when all cable goes digital, it's not supposed to affect the cable ready TV's. What's up with that? "Digital" is a misnomer really. Before congress sold out to China to force everyone to buy new TV's (Y2K hoax all over again), cable companies used the word "digital" to make pay channels sound better.. In fact, all cable signals are "Digital". But to the cable companies "digital" was a way of sorting out the good channels so they could make them "premium" which is what they really should have called them.. Of course that would have come off just as phony as their claim that "Sattelite" providers are resold, have you ever gone by a "cable" office and seen all the sattelite dishes in front Once again, you demonstrate you simply do not understand anything. Stick to sandpaper, or something else that doesn't require thinking.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, once again you say you are informed, but offer zero information to back your claim.. I mean, it's obvious that you have plenty of time to correct me (cut and paste from google), but you really have nothing to offer... Stick to insults, it's all you have... |
#35
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
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#36
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
wrote in message ... "Digital" is a misnomer really. Before congress sold out to China to force everyone to buy new TV's (Y2K hoax all over again), cable companies used the word "digital" to make pay channels sound better.. In fact, all cable signals are "Digital". But to the cable companies "digital" was a way of sorting out the good channels so they could make them "premium" which is what they really should have called them.. Of course that would have come off just as phony as their claim that "Sattelite" providers are resold, have you ever gone by a "cable" office and seen all the sattelite dishes in front ====================================== Um. In a word ...... Wrong. Eisboch |
#37
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
On Jan 7, 1:52*pm, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message ... "Digital" is a misnomer really. Before congress sold out to China to force everyone to buy new TV's (Y2K hoax all over again), cable companies used the word "digital" to make pay channels sound better.. In fact, all cable signals are "Digital". But to the cable companies "digital" was a way of sorting out the good channels so they could make them "premium" which is what they really should have called them.. Of course that would have come off just as phony as their claim that "Sattelite" providers are resold, have you ever gone by a "cable" office and seen all the sattelite dishes in front ====================================== Um. *In a word ...... *Wrong. Eisboch Oh well... |
#38
posted to rec.boats
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OT Digital Converter Boxes
On Jan 7, 1:56*pm, wrote:
On Jan 7, 1:52*pm, "Eisboch" wrote: wrote in message .... "Digital" is a misnomer really. Before congress sold out to China to force everyone to buy new TV's (Y2K hoax all over again), cable companies used the word "digital" to make pay channels sound better.. In fact, all cable signals are "Digital". But to the cable companies "digital" was a way of sorting out the good channels so they could make them "premium" which is what they really should have called them.. Of course that would have come off just as phony as their claim that "Sattelite" providers are resold, have you ever gone by a "cable" office and seen all the sattelite dishes in front ====================================== Um. *In a word ...... *Wrong. Eisboch Oh well... - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#39
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
wrote in message ... Well, once again you say you are informed, but offer zero information to back your claim.. I mean, it's obvious that you have plenty of time to correct me (cut and paste from google), but you really have nothing to offer... Stick to insults, it's all you have... ================================== I'll try. If you have an older, non-digital television and hook it up to your cable directly from the wall, meaning no cable box, whatever programming you can watch is analog. It can be good, or it may be fuzzy. Analog signals can be processed and displayed even if they are weak, whereas with digital you will either get a lock and a "perfect" picture or you'll get no picture at all. You can see digital occasionally dropping out of sync. The TV actually has a buffer in it (as does the cable box) to filter out these occasional, temporary dropouts. The cable companies currently send both analog and digital programming. If you are using a cable box and a non-digital TV, the box is converting the digital programming to analog so your TV can display it. HD programming is all digital. But .... (big but) ... just because you get a digital TV, it doesn't mean you will receive all digital programming sent without a cable box. You need a cable box to receive any non-basic, premium programs. It all depends on what your purchased "package" includes. Eisboch |
#40
posted to rec.boats
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Digital Converter Boxes
"hk" wrote in message ... Here's a hint: "digital" in cable tv usage has a lot to do with numbers like 480, 720, and higher, and very little to do with beaming signals down from satellites. Um. not really. I think we are discussing digital versus analog signal transmission methods, not format or screen resolution. Eisboch |
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