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#21
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They need to invest that to do digital - SD is digital, HD is
digital,,,they have to be able to edit/produce/convert ones and zeroes. It has nothing to do with HD. Now answer my question - how are they going to pay back that investment? By sending you free OTA HD, you and the other 16 percent of the OTA market,,? "Matthew L. Martin" wrote: wrote: Mat You need to get back on the Prozac dude,, i have local station feeds, with network programs, on my Direct TV right now, They are also on Cox cable,,, For a premium right now I can get the HD feeds from the local network affliates to,,, There is no legal restrictions at all,,just contracts between the networks and the cabl/Sat companies. You still haven't answered the question put to you: Why are local stations spending millions for HD infrastructures if they don't plan on creating and broadcasting HD content? Matthew -- Thermodynamics and/or Golf for dummies: There is a game You can't win You can't break even You can't get out of the game |
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#23
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wrote:
They need to invest that to do digital - SD is digital, HD is digital,,,they have to be able to edit/produce/convert ones and zeroes. It has nothing to do with HD. Now answer my question - how are they going to pay back that investment? By sending you free OTA HD, you and the other 16 percent of the OTA market,,? And what percentage of that 16% has an HDTV? When will the rest of them get an HDTV? We are not talking the best demographic for HD here. We are talking about the 16% who either can't afford a TV, can't afford cable and satellite if they have a TV, some of this crowd steals cable or satellite and the rest, maybe 2% of this 16% don't want to watch TV whether they can afford it or not. And the real number of those who still rely on OTA is not 16% to begin with IMO. A recent telephone survey found that 19% reported that they had a TV that relied on OTA for reception in the house. Of those 52% said they also had cable or satellite. That would leave about 9.88% who actually rely on OTA and have a telephone. You can decide how much of the time that other OTA TV set was watched in those homes that also had cable or satellite, the 9.22% other houses that also had a telephone. Broadcasters are only going to give away HD as long as it is politically wise to do so or if they find that they can make more money OTA with advertising alone. But at the moment they plan on being paid by cable and satellite AND getting the ad revenue. Same goes for OTA, they plan on both ad revenue and subscriber fees, whether from cable, satellite or OTA. Bob Miller "Matthew L. Martin" wrote: wrote: Mat You need to get back on the Prozac dude,, i have local station feeds, with network programs, on my Direct TV right now, They are also on Cox cable,,, For a premium right now I can get the HD feeds from the local network affliates to,,, There is no legal restrictions at all,,just contracts between the networks and the cabl/Sat companies. You still haven't answered the question put to you: Why are local stations spending millions for HD infrastructures if they don't plan on creating and broadcasting HD content? Matthew -- Thermodynamics and/or Golf for dummies: There is a game You can't win You can't break even You can't get out of the game |
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#24
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Bob
if you look over all my posts, my data supported figures for those watching digital TV right now is 3 percent of market. The 16% being those 'dependant" on only OTA analog TV. Will go out on a limb and say all of the 3 percent are watching in HD OTA. That leaves 97 percent that are not,,, and notice that Wes never responded back about my "correction" of his 10 fold error in calculating , nor has Dave responded back rationally to anything other than my one Agent spelling checker replacement error. BTW,,Its "Dude" not Dood",,,ROTFL,,,,,,,!!!!!!! Why post if you are not willing to be involved in a productive give and take discussion,,?? What's up with these Wes and Davids - who the second the can not come up with a rational rebuttal, resort to infantile name calling,, Or did I just answer my own question there,,,LOL and no,,I am not Bob, and actually i did research Bobs posts, and have no opinion about his technical arguments, but have to say regardless that the"'cow is out of the barn" so to speak, and we have to live with what we got. his economic arguments however are supported by hard facts,and right on the mark. Bob Miller wrote: wrote: They need to invest that to do digital - SD is digital, HD is digital,,,they have to be able to edit/produce/convert ones and zeroes. It has nothing to do with HD. Now answer my question - how are they going to pay back that investment? By sending you free OTA HD, you and the other 16 percent of the OTA market,,? And what percentage of that 16% has an HDTV? When will the rest of them get an HDTV? We are not talking the best demographic for HD here. We are talking about the 16% who either can't afford a TV, can't afford cable and satellite if they have a TV, some of this crowd steals cable or satellite and the rest, maybe 2% of this 16% don't want to watch TV whether they can afford it or not. And the real number of those who still rely on OTA is not 16% to begin with IMO. A recent telephone survey found that 19% reported that they had a TV that relied on OTA for reception in the house. Of those 52% said they also had cable or satellite. That would leave about 9.88% who actually rely on OTA and have a telephone. You can decide how much of the time that other OTA TV set was watched in those homes that also had cable or satellite, the 9.22% other houses that also had a telephone. Broadcasters are only going to give away HD as long as it is politically wise to do so or if they find that they can make more money OTA with advertising alone. But at the moment they plan on being paid by cable and satellite AND getting the ad revenue. Same goes for OTA, they plan on both ad revenue and subscriber fees, whether from cable, satellite or OTA. Bob Miller |
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#25
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wrote:
Bob if you look over all my posts, my data supported figures for those watching digital TV right now is 3 percent of market. The 16% being those 'dependant" on only OTA analog TV. Will go out on a limb and say all of the 3 percent are watching in HD OTA. That leaves 97 percent that are not,,, and notice that Wes never responded back about my "correction" of his 10 fold error in calculating , nor has Dave responded back rationally to anything other than my one Agent spelling checker replacement error. BTW,,Its "Dude" not Dood",,,ROTFL,,,,,,,!!!!!!! Why post if you are not willing to be involved in a productive give and take discussion,,?? What's up with these Wes and Davids - who the second the can not come up with a rational rebuttal, resort to infantile name calling,, Or did I just answer my own question there,,,LOL and no,,I am not Bob, and actually i did research Bobs posts, and have no opinion about his technical arguments, but have to say regardless that the"'cow is out of the barn" so to speak, and we have to live with what we got. his economic arguments however are supported by hard facts,and right on the mark. FIrst off, HD and SD digital being the same is so FAR off the mark it's hard to know where to start. They are TOTALLY different. The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 To edit you need a minimum of 2, better is 3 or 4. You also need an HD switcher, another 1/4 million plus other support gear so your edit bay can easily go over a million. Now you need a driver to run it and more to maintain. If there is no money in HD or you could 'get away' with SD, why would anyone buy these things ? The OTA vs cable ? When you watch network programming on cable where do you think it comes from ? It comes from the local station whether OTA, direct studio feed or whatever but those cable viewers count in the stations numbers. The actual transmitter is a 'liability' - unless the cable operators in the market get their 'locals' off air. Since you're new here, ease up on the arrogance and try to bottom post. GG |
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#26
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On Wed, 6 Sep 2006, G-squared wrote:
The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 I'm surprised that it's that cheap. Remember what quad went for? ;-) -- Mark -- http://staff.washington.edu/mrc Science does not emerge from voting, party politics, or public debate. Si vis pacem, para bellum. |
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#27
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"G-squared" wrote:
wrote: Bob if you look over all my posts, my data supported figures for those watching digital TV right now is 3 percent of market. The 16% being those 'dependant" on only OTA analog TV. Will go out on a limb and say all of the 3 percent are watching in HD OTA. That leaves 97 percent that are not,,, and notice that Wes never responded back about my "correction" of his 10 fold error in calculating , nor has Dave responded back rationally to anything other than my one Agent spelling checker replacement error. BTW,,Its "Dude" not Dood",,,ROTFL,,,,,,,!!!!!!! Why post if you are not willing to be involved in a productive give and take discussion,,?? What's up with these Wes and Davids - who the second the can not come up with a rational rebuttal, resort to infantile name calling,, Or did I just answer my own question there,,,LOL and no,,I am not Bob, and actually i did research Bobs posts, and have no opinion about his technical arguments, but have to say regardless that the"'cow is out of the barn" so to speak, and we have to live with what we got. his economic arguments however are supported by hard facts,and right on the mark. FIrst off, HD and SD digital being the same is so FAR off the mark it's hard to know where to start. They are TOTALLY different. The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 To edit you need a minimum of 2, better is 3 or 4. You also need an HD switcher, another 1/4 million plus other support gear so your edit bay can easily go over a million. Now you need a driver to run it and more to maintain. If there is no money in HD or you could 'get away' with SD, why would anyone buy these things ? The OTA vs cable ? When you watch network programming on cable where do you think it comes from ? It comes from the local station whether OTA, direct studio feed or whatever but those cable viewers count in the stations numbers. The actual transmitter is a 'liability' - unless the cable operators in the market get their 'locals' off air. Since you're new here, ease up on the arrogance and try to bottom post. GG You need to follow the entire post. Never claimed HD was the same as Sd,,Hd is a very valuable commodity, expensive to produce, expensive to edit, and its not going to be given away to a 3 percent market share. They will SELL it to the cable and Sat provides as part of the Premium Digital package, You will see Jay Leno at 10 pm OTA in SD, and Jay Leno on premium cable/sat in HD at the same time. Same Jay Leno,,,just more nose hairs. The OTA stations have to do this to survive, they need to have all 5 channels, they can not have that if the use all the bandwidth to send 3 percent of the market a free HD signal. Why this is such a hard concept to get across is beyond me,,,?? Do you all work at companies that give away their best and most valuable products,,????? and now I add "top posting" to my list of non sequitur arguments - is that the best facts you can post,,??? |
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#28
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Mark Crispin wrote: On Wed, 6 Sep 2006, G-squared wrote: The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 I'm surprised that it's that cheap. Remember what quad went for? ;-) -- Mark -- http://staff.washington.edu/mrc Science does not emerge from voting, party politics, or public debate. Si vis pacem, para bellum. By the time you add the needed options the price pops up another $15K. As for quads, depends on which one you were talking. AVR-1 BIG bucks. AVR-2 much less. FWIW, I maintain an AVR-3 which has been getting regular use. Love the sound of a quad. GG |
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#29
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wrote:
"G-squared" wrote: snip FIrst off, HD and SD digital being the same is so FAR off the mark it's hard to know where to start. They are TOTALLY different. The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 To edit you need a minimum of 2, better is 3 or 4. You also need an HD switcher, another 1/4 million plus other support gear so your edit bay can easily go over a million. Now you need a driver to run it and more to maintain. If there is no money in HD or you could 'get away' with SD, why would anyone buy these things ? The OTA vs cable ? When you watch network programming on cable where do you think it comes from ? It comes from the local station whether OTA, direct studio feed or whatever but those cable viewers count in the stations numbers. The actual transmitter is a 'liability' - unless the cable operators in the market get their 'locals' off air. Since you're new here, ease up on the arrogance and try to bottom post. GG You need to follow the entire post. Never claimed HD was the same as Sd,,Hd is a very valuable commodity, expensive to produce, expensive to edit, and its not going to be given away to a 3 percent market share. They will SELL it to the cable and Sat provides as part of the Premium Digital package, You will see Jay Leno at 10 pm OTA in SD, and Jay Leno on premium cable/sat in HD at the same time. Same Jay Leno,,,just more nose hairs. The OTA stations have to do this to survive, they need to have all 5 channels, they can not have that if the use all the bandwidth to send 3 percent of the market a free HD signal. Why this is such a hard concept to get across is beyond me,,,?? Do you all work at companies that give away their best and most valuable products,,????? and now I add "top posting" to my list of non sequitur arguments - is that the best facts you can post,,??? Your analogy is inaccurate. The same analogy would have applied when CD replaced LP and DVD eliminated VHS. The price is elevated for a while until the new format becomes a commodity and the old format goes away. SD will not exist in parallel, it will go away. OTA stations with 5 SD feeds will be nothing stations with tiny numbers. With no numbers, they have no money to get better programming so they stay tiny. The programming will start out as HD as its getting hard to get new SD gear so why bother making crap? To get your SD signal, they have to buy another piece of gear to down-res the HD to SD. Why bother to do that? The genie is already out of the bottle on this one. Why would I buy the expensive cable/satellite service when I get it for free? You say they will turn it off? OK, I prefer a good book anyway. Keep in mind when you DO manage to get rid of the networks, 3/4 of your 'new' cable programming goes away because that's most of what cable shows. What OTA can and DOES do is 1 HD and 1 or 2 SD on the carrier. Very common in LA. Or are you absolutely asserting it MUST be 5 SDs ? GG |
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#30
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"G-squared" wrote:
wrote: "G-squared" wrote: snip FIrst off, HD and SD digital being the same is so FAR off the mark it's hard to know where to start. They are TOTALLY different. The Sony SRW deck is one of the new workhorses of the industry. Check price here http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_g...terid=22522555 To edit you need a minimum of 2, better is 3 or 4. You also need an HD switcher, another 1/4 million plus other support gear so your edit bay can easily go over a million. Now you need a driver to run it and more to maintain. If there is no money in HD or you could 'get away' with SD, why would anyone buy these things ? The OTA vs cable ? When you watch network programming on cable where do you think it comes from ? It comes from the local station whether OTA, direct studio feed or whatever but those cable viewers count in the stations numbers. The actual transmitter is a 'liability' - unless the cable operators in the market get their 'locals' off air. Since you're new here, ease up on the arrogance and try to bottom post. GG You need to follow the entire post. Never claimed HD was the same as Sd,,Hd is a very valuable commodity, expensive to produce, expensive to edit, and its not going to be given away to a 3 percent market share. They will SELL it to the cable and Sat provides as part of the Premium Digital package, You will see Jay Leno at 10 pm OTA in SD, and Jay Leno on premium cable/sat in HD at the same time. Same Jay Leno,,,just more nose hairs. The OTA stations have to do this to survive, they need to have all 5 channels, they can not have that if the use all the bandwidth to send 3 percent of the market a free HD signal. Why this is such a hard concept to get across is beyond me,,,?? Do you all work at companies that give away their best and most valuable products,,????? and now I add "top posting" to my list of non sequitur arguments - is that the best facts you can post,,??? Your analogy is inaccurate. The same analogy would have applied when CD replaced LP and DVD eliminated VHS. The price is elevated for a while until the new format becomes a commodity and the old format goes away. SD will not exist in parallel, it will go away. OTA stations with 5 SD feeds will be nothing stations with tiny numbers. With no numbers, they have no money to get better programming so they stay tiny. The programming will start out as HD as its getting hard to get new SD gear so why bother making crap? To get your SD signal, they have to buy another piece of gear to down-res the HD to SD. Why bother to do that? The genie is already out of the bottle on this one. Why would I buy the expensive cable/satellite service when I get it for free? You say they will turn it off? OK, I prefer a good book anyway. Keep in mind when you DO manage to get rid of the networks, 3/4 of your 'new' cable programming goes away because that's most of what cable shows. What OTA can and DOES do is 1 HD and 1 or 2 SD on the carrier. Very common in LA. Or are you absolutely asserting it MUST be 5 SDs ? GG I am asserting that they must carry 5 channels, just as cable must carry 500 channels..each channel is an income opportunity. In 2009 when Ma and Pa Kettle turn on their new Digital Ready 100 dollar 27 inch TV, or their convertor box and press "auto program",,,there had better be a signal in each sub channel, or the OTA broadcaster has lost his market. Nobody gives a rats about picture quality,,try to understand that, If they did, the cable and Sat companies would be giving us 50 channels of pristine wide screen 480i programming, instead of 500 channels of barely watch able crap. Your argument ensures that OTA will go away completely. They are barely viable businesses now,,giving away their most valuable product after 2009 is not the road to more profits. and why do you call SD crap...?? Sd done without the excessive compression you see on cable and Sat can give you a picture equal to the best DVDs you can buy. Its just that you have never seen true SD , the cable and Sat providers compress the hell out of it to squeeze in more channels - the same more channels that you claim the OTA broadcaster can some how magically live without. |
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