digital switch over

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do people realy understand what this means.
i install aerials and satellite and most custmors do not understand what all this means.
there will come a time were one day they will have tv and the next its gone.
 
rubin1961 said:
do people realy understand what this means.
i install aerials and satellite and most custmors do not understand what all this means.
there will come a time were one day they will have tv and the next its gone.

i would imagine the advertising will ramp up considerably untill you won't have a choise but to take notice
 
rubin1961 said:
do people realy understand what this means.
i install aerials and satellite and most custmors do not understand what all this means.
there will come a time were one day they will have tv and the next its gone.

not sure what you are getting at :eek: do you mean that if they are still analogue when things goes digital they will have to switch to from a to d and untill them they will have to TV?

or do you mean that potentially you will be out of a job? (not having a laugh btw)
 
I'd imagine after the actual switch-off of live channel transmission on analogue they'll replace it with a static screen instructing people to get Digital for months to come.

It won't be armageddon.
 
not sure what you are getting at do you mean that if they are still analogue when things goes digital they will have to switch to from a to d and untill them they will have to TV?

or do you mean that potentially you will be out of a job? (not having a laugh btw

never be out of a job m8 to many bogers out there we just keep putting things right what they should have done in the first place.
 
Clerkin said:

When they turn off analogue, they will have lots of spare frequencies to play with - to do something else with, or to simply expand the freeview channels etc...
 
daz said:
What will they do with the bandwidth that's left? More freeview channels?

With any luck it will lead to an increase of bit rate rather than too many more channels. Really is quite a quality difference at the moment.
 
We have sky and freeview in this house, but I'm still dreading the time when analogue finally turns off.

The picture quality of sky is appalling, and we don't live in a great area for freeview so some channels are too weak to work. (We have a decent ariel).

Plus I'll have nothing to watch when sky goes down due to bad weather (it rains a bit hard :rolleyes: ).

I just hope that before they finally switch over they sort some of the problems out, at the moment some the analogue channels look better than the digi ones.
 
MonkeyMan said:
We have sky and freeview in this house, but I'm still dreading the time when analogue finally turns off.

The picture quality of sky is appalling, and we don't live in a great area for freeview so some channels are too weak to work. (We have a decent ariel).

Plus I'll have nothing to watch when sky goes down due to bad weather (it rains a bit hard :rolleyes: ).

I just hope that before they finally switch over they sort some of the problems out, at the moment some the analogue channels look better than the digi ones.

As far as i am aware when analogue goes, the power of the digital trasmissions is going to be increased dramatically to cover the millions of dead spots at the moment. :) Read this in a few reputable places, and certainly sounds plausable, i hardly know anyone who gets spot on digital reception, there is no way it could be the only solution as it is now.
 
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