13 June 2009

Whew

The New York Times has an article by Brian Stelter about the unlamented end of analog:
Television stations across the United States powered down their analog signals on Friday, hours ahead of the long-awaited midnight deadline for the country to switch to fully digital TV broadcasts.
The transition day was a tense one at some stations, as they ended analog broadcasts and awaited calls from viewers still confused by the changeover and others having reception problems. According to Nielsen, about 2.8 million homes are completely unprepared for the transition. An additional 9.5 million homes are only partly ready, meaning that they may have upgraded some of their TVs, but not all of them.
These viewers may be surprised on Saturday to find their televisions unable to pick up signals. The National Association of Broadcasters said the early call volumes were “low to moderate”, but the phones were busier at stations in states with high numbers of unprepared homes. In Houston, one of the least-prepared markets, stations reported an average of 675 calls through early afternoon.
Most of the rest of the country is unlikely to notice the change. Cable and satellite customers are automatically prepared because they do not rely on over-the-air signals. Over-the-air homes either need to buy a digital converter box or use a TV with an internal digital tuner. The viewers may also need to adjust their antenna or buy a new antenna.
The switch was staggered across the country, as some stations switched before dawn. Many others were planning to wait until 11:59 p.m.
Many of the viewers who called WAFB, the CBS affiliate in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, claimed they did not know about the transition, despite incessant TV advertising and community outreach. Sandy Breland, the general manager of WAFB, said most of the calls came immediately after the switch at 7 a.m. and involved rescanning of sets. (Because some stations are moving to new positions on the dial, viewers must reset their television lineups to see all the channels.) On Friday the Federal Communications Commission said calls to its help line, 1-888-CALL-FCC, were running about three times as high as Thursday, which had been a record high day.
Rico says you'd have had to have been blind and deaf, or dead, to "not know about the transition"...

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