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1/3 of stations ignore DTV delay

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  • 1/3 of stations ignore DTV delay

    Link....

    Many TV stations to make DTV switch next week

    Despite a regulator-approved delay to the nationwide digital TV switchover, more than a third of the nation's TV stations plan to begin broadcasting completely in digital next week.

    The Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday released a list of 681 of the nation's 1,800 or so TV stations that plan to make the switch by February 17. TV stations were required to notify the FCC by Monday if they planned to turn off their analog TV signal on February 17.

    Earlier this month, the House of Representatives passed a bill that moves the deadline for transitioning TV broadcast from analog to digital from February 17 to June 12. The Senate has also passed a similar bill. President Obama is expected to sign it into law shortly. However, a compromise provision allows broadcasters to transition to all-digital broadcasts early if they get permission from the FCC.

    Congress approved the delay out of concern that 20 million people, most of whom are poor, elderly, and living in rural parts of the country, were not prepared for the transition after the government ran out of the $40 coupons it was issuing to help defray the cost of the converter boxes necessary to allow older TVs to get digital signals.

    Stations have been preparing to cut off their analog broadcasts for the February 17 deadline for months. Leaving the analog signals on will likely cost them more money as they are required to pay for the additional electricity and facility costs of running multiple transmitters. Most stations have already been airing some programming in digital.

    The major broadcast networks, including ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC/Telemundo, have all agreed that their owned and operated stations would continue to broadcast in analog until the new DTV transition date.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    The bill should not have passed.
    It's not like there has not been ample warning that this was going to happen.
    Anyone not prepared for the change has noone to blame but themselves.
    There has been annoying commercials and scrolling text at the bottom of every broadcast for the last year or more.
    Everyone had a ample chance for the government coupons, or to save a few bux a month to buy the converters before the switch.

    This change does not even effect many of the rural areas, where low-power broadcast stations are not required to make the change.

    Broadcast companies have been planning this switch for years, and to delay will cost them a lot of money. There's no reason to burden them with the costs of a delay.

    At least a couple local stations here are saying they are switching on the Feb 17 date as originally planned, and I don't blame them.
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