My mom's been getting a banner running across her favorite channels saying "If you ever want to see the Hallmark Channel again, you must buy an outrageously priced digital converter or Hallmark dies"
Or something along those lines.
My Mother and sister got a digital converter for $1 more a month! Only deal is it only works on one TV, if you want a DVR that's another $30 a month.
From the link Jackee provided:
Q: Is it true if I subscribe to cable or satellite TV service, I can continue using that hand-me-down TV set from a few decades ago after the switchover?
A: That's right. Because if you're not even using your TV set's over-the-air tuner, there's no problem. You'll continue to receive all the channels you'd expect--including local broadcast offerings, assuming the service carried them in the first place and will continue to do so--without any need to buy new equipment. And naturally, those who receive Internet Protocol or IPTV--that is, channels shuttled over the Internet--through telephone carriers like AT&T and Verizon, won't have to make any changes either.
There's a lot of hoopla over a non-issue.
Ditto here Chris. Very well explained except I'm sorry to say that Dish Network will be going up in price if only for the reason that I'm a multiple subscriber. It's just my luck.Nice explanation, Chris.
Yeah, I like the part about "your cable bill won't go up." I''ll take the over on that one...
The cable systems are already complaining about the additional bandwidth they claim they will have to use to carry all the additional over-the-air local signals expected with an all-digital system. More channels equals more money. Of course, they conveniently overlook the fact that they can carry more digital channels in the same bandwidth they currently use for analog signals.