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The Joys of HDTV

Iron Webmaster wrote to us with a recent feature regarding the trials of HDTV installation. It's a semiamusing story - but it also points out some of the major problems with the cutting edge stuff. I know from personal experience in the Boston-area that even digital cable is...not as good as the companies claim. The infrastructure for this stuff is just not in place, and many companies are betting their future on it.

4 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. HDTV is dead. Long live HDTV by tenzig_112 · · Score: 5
    From what we saw at NAB 2001: Spring Break for TV Geeks, the future of the format of the future is still unclear.

    Vote of no-confidence: ABC dumped it for Monday Night Football last year and sold their HD truck. Sure, HD editing systems and hard drives get cheaper, but lightly-compressed HD decks and other infrastructure items carry such a high price tag, it would make you want to cry. The only solution for the consumer-end will likely be so compressed [ala digital cable & DSS] that consumers will be unable to tell the difference between NTSC and HDTV.

    This is what we call the "big plate of crap" theory. Why would consumers spend all that money for a bigger plate of crap, trading analog noise for digital artifacts which blur the image rendering the higher resolution moot?

    You're still going to see HD take off as an e-cinema vehicle and at big trade shows. But I don't think broadcasters [who got all this bandwidth for FREE for this very purpose] can be trusted to deliver the goods without mucking it up with multiplexed NTSC and data services to boost their bottom lines.

  2. Fight your techno-geek addiction... by Gruneun · · Score: 5

    I make it a rule, despite my huge craving for anything new and shiny, to hold off on buying the first versions of anything.

    Anyone get screwed by buying...
    Beta? (no quality arguements, just show me the Walmart aisle)
    Laserdisc?
    Minidisc?
    Non-DOCSIS cable modem? (me... very recently)
    First year car model? (friend's Jeep Liberty)

    Let the standards be decided and buy then. It's absolutely killing me that I don't have my widescreen HDTV, but I'm waiting until I see that it's becoming more commonplace and less likely that I'll get burned. Seeing an article like this only reminds me I made the right decision.

  3. Guess the Times takes it's TV seriously by Chakat · · Score: 5
    From the URL: http://www.latimes.com/features/religion/la-000020 341jun30.column?coll=la%2Dnews%2Dreligion

    Of course, this is the LA area, so I guess it should be taken as a given

    D - M - C - A

    --

    If god had intended you to be naked, you would have been born that way.

  4. HDTV is lovely by koreth · · Score: 5
    It's not difficult to check for over-the-air DTV availability in a particular area. Or to check DirecTV's Web site and discover that they don't carry HDTV other than HBO and a few pay-per-view movies. The guy who wrote the article clearly should have done a bit of homework before blowing 7 grand on a video system. It seems like he saw the word "digital" in a few different places and assumed it was all the same thing.

    That said, for those of us in places like the San Francisco Bay Area, which has a large number of digital stations, DTV and HDTV are just lovely. On a clear day, my rooftop antenna picks up six or seven digital stations. The picture quality is stunning even on the standard definition stations, much crisper than the clearest cable channels and most DirecTV channels. And HD shows look better than the picture at the local movie theaters. The picture has yet to fail to elicit a "wow" when I've shown it to people.

    And the cool thing is, it's on my computer using an ATSC tuner card which means I can record the digital signal to my hard disk for later viewing - not as slick as a TiVo, but adequate. (And before you ask why anyone would watch HDTV on a 17" monitor, the monitor on that PC is one of these, more or less, less expensive than a new HDTV if you buy it used.)

    I do wish the prices would come down on more traditional HDTV sets and that they'd get the integration issues straightened out so a separate settop box wasn't required. Better market penetration will equal more incentive for the networks to produce more HD shows. But if you're willing to actually learn about what you're buying, the technology is out there and working.