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OrangeSoul
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. local television broadcasters said on Tuesday they would accept a 2009 deadline to switch to airing only higher-quality digital signals, a date being considered by lawmakers.
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However, they urged Congress to give consumers the choice of receiving the new signals as-is or converting them to analog so that they would work on older television sets -- and to require cable companies to carry extra channels broadcasters offer.

"Broadcasters accept that Congress will implement a 2009 hard date for the end of analog broadcasts, and we're ready," Edward Fritts, president and chief executive of the National Association of Broadcasters, which represents hundreds of local stations, told the Senate Commerce Committee.

The Senate and U.S. House of Representatives are considering setting late 2008 or early 2009 as the date for completing the transition to digital television signals.

Current law requires local television stations to give up their analog airwaves only when 85 percent of the country can receive the new digital signals or on Dec. 31, 2006, whichever comes later.

Sen. Ted Stevens (news, bio, voting record), an Alaska Republican and the committee chairman, told reporters after a hearing that the deadline for completing the digital switch-over should be set sometime in 2009.

One of the biggest concerns confronting lawmakers as they grapple with setting a final deadline is that most Americans do not have new sets or converter boxes capable of receiving the digital signals. A subsidy program is one possibility under review.

"If you want an uproar from the people of this country, you have their televisions turned off," cautioned Sen. George Allen (news, bio, voting record), a Virginia Republican.

Stevens said he also wanted to move up the date when all televisions sold in the United States would have to be able to receive digital signals. The
Federal Communications Commission has set a July 1, 2007 date for most sets to be capable and is already considering moving that up.

The demands for cable companies to carry extra digital channels and analog signals drew a rebuke from Kyle McSlarrow, president and chief executive of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, who said the goal was instead to free up the airwaves for public safety organizations.

"Nothing the broadcasters have proposed has the slightest bearing on how you can best ensure the return of the spectrum and how you can do so with a minimum of inconvenience to consumers," McSlarrow told the Senate committee.

The government wants to sell the old airwaves used by broadcasters to wireless companies and provide some of them for public safety communications. The sale could also reap billions of dollars and potentially fill a budget gap.

Some senators expressed impatience at the prospect of waiting several more years, saying the lack of spectrum would hinder emergency workers in the event of an attack.

"The bombings last week in London reinforce the immediate need for this spectrum," said committee member Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record), a Republican from Arizona.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050712/pl_nm/media_digitaltv_dc
bangbang023
They pushed it back to 2009 now? Damnit. I'm getting tired of this. All this means is that they can slow down the push til later years and then once again send everyone into panic mode near the deadline.
OrangeSoul
no the congress wants it by 2007, tv stations want it by 2009
bangbang023
QUOTE(OrangeSoul @ Jul 12 2005, 22:54)
no the congress wants it by 2007, tv stations want it by 2009
[right][snapback]586204804[/snapback][/right]

Yeah, I should have read it more carefully. Honestly, I think they should maybe push it back one year to 2007 and start educating people immediately that hdtv is not always going to be a luxury and that future purchases should account for the nearing transition.
TheDreamX
Remember, everyone, (before this thread gets out of hand) that Congress has required over-the-air (aka antenna, not cable) signals to be HDTV by 2007. This report is a little misleading as I think they now want to move that date back to 2009, not convert all cable stations to HDTV by 2009.
bangbang023
QUOTE(TheDreamX @ Jul 12 2005, 22:59)
Remember, everyone, (before this thread gets out of hand) that Congress has required over-the-air (aka antenna, not cable) signals to be HDTV by 2007. This report is a little misleading as I think they now want to move that date back to 2009, not convert all cable stations to HDTV by 2009.
[right][snapback]586204824[/snapback][/right]

That is correct, but Cable/Sat is going to have to upgrade if they are going to want to compete with the free stuff. DirecTV is massively pushing HD and should have a HUGE number of HD channels active by the end of the year. Hopefully, that sparks a fire and competition does it's job in forcing other services to also upgrade.
L3thal
Looks like I'll be getting an HDTV sometime around 2007 wink.gif
nekrosoft13
i got hdtv already with 4 year warranty, gonna break it 3 years from now and get some 60+ inch set wink.gif they should be cheaper by then
viserov
I don't have an HDTV set. If I get a converter (hypothetically, that is) so I can accept HDTV signals, is there going to be ANY increase in quality of the programming, or will it look the same until I get an actual HDTV set?
bangbang023
QUOTE(viserov @ Jul 13 2005, 00:32)
I don't have an HDTV set. If I get a converter (hypothetically, that is) so I can accept HDTV signals, is there going to be ANY increase in quality of the programming, or will it look the same until I get an actual HDTV set?
[right][snapback]586205150[/snapback][/right]

will look the same
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