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Free-to-Air TV and Radio?

ChiaBen asks: "I was visiting a friend recently who has a Free-to-air satellite receiver. It allows him to pick up any free satellite TV and radio programs, along with many pay-to-view (requires a payment, of course) programs. Nokia has a receiver, and I'd like to know if else is making similar hardware. It seems interesting, but before I drop a few hundred bones on one, I'd like to know what everyone has to say about it?"

7 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. Re:free to air tv and radio, if you steal it! by ebooher · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm trying to assume that you are making a joke here. Yet, I'm not so sure that's how you mean this to be taken.

    Free to Air or FTA Satellite TV has nothing to do with stealing content. The systems and broadcasters that want to protect their content have, using multiple encryption schemes. But there are birds up there that still have plenty of unscrambled content on them. It is *exactly* the same as putting an arial on your roof and receiving your local TV stations directly and telling your cable company to take a long walk.

    This has nothing to do with trying to force / crack security ala DirecTV access cards to receive pay content for nothing. Please note the difference.

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  2. Big dish still lives by bigbigbison · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want non-English language programming or local programming, there is still tons of stuff being broadcast for free from satellites. Satellite Guys is one of the best sources for info. Check out their forums, specifically the Free to Air one. Here's a list of what is available up there for free.

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  3. Get a DVB-S card by evilviper · · Score: 4, Informative

    Forget a stand-alone reciever. They're very inflexible, and a bit expensive for what you get.

    Meanwhile, a PCI DVB-S card can be as cheap as $50, and with software decoding, you can play 4:2:2 streams, HDTV streams, free IP access from some satellites, and you don't need to worry about whether or not the reciever manufacturer will fix any bugs in it's firmware, or whether or not one reciever has an difficult to use menu system, etc.

    Disclaimer: I don't have either, but I've been looking at info all around the net (user reviews, forums, etc), deciding the same thing myself, over the past few weeks.

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    1. Re:Get a DVB-S card by PorkNutz · · Score: 2, Informative
      In NA you can recieve DishNetwork and Bell ExpessVu for free with these cards. There are many different bits of software you can use to do it. Although you cannot use them to recieve DN HDTV signals from any of the satellites, BEV sat Nimiq 2 has almost 40 HD channels that can be recieved. Whith a 100cm dish, universal LNB and dish motor, there are literally thousands of channels across dozens of satellites that can be recieved. Both FTA and encrypted... even remote news feeds

      For all you linux lovers out there, this is the perfect choice to build a HTPC using MythTV.

      This site is the best place to find all the info you would ever need to get started.

  4. Re:I do not do this. by Jack+Schitt · · Score: 3, Informative

    You can't steal something provided for free. In other words, they decided to broadcast into your backyard, if you manage to decode it, the onus is on the sat company to fix it, not you to NOT decode it.

    The best analogy I can think of is that decoding a flashing light you can see from your back yard is stealing. (Yes I understand that technically speacking, sattelites don't communicate via a flashing light, but then again, if you think about the nature of electromagnetism...)

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  5. Don't make it to easy for us... by biglig2 · · Score: 1, Informative

    ...by, for example, telling us what frickin' country you're in... I dunno, we Brits invented the computer and the web, but do we get any respect?

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    ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
  6. Re:DoD is British? by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Informative
    I didn't realize the US DoD was a British organization... Maybe you guys did networking first, but the Internet was american.

    Oh dear. Hand in your geek card. The parent said 'computers and the web', not 'computers and the internet'. You think 'web' and 'internet' are synonymous? What are you doing on Slashdot?

    For the record, it's certainly true that a Briton invented the Web: specifically it was Tim Berners Lee, while working at CERN. As for computers, that's probably also true, but depending on what you call a computer it might have been American.

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