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DTV Transition Mostly Smooth, Windows Media Center Problems

dritan writes "While most of the transition to digital seems to have gone smoothly, those who use Windows Media Center saw their screens go dark. Users are complaining that Media Center did not pick up changes to channel assignments that took place on Friday. Someone forgot to update the static channel lists distributed with the program guide. Users either have to wait for Microsoft to fix the problem, or manually edit the configuration files." Reports indicate that the FCC received upwards of 300,000 calls on Friday from consumers seeking late help with the transition, but they were prepared, with over 4,000 operators available to handle problems. The FCC's DTV website also had over 3 million hits on Friday. Both phone and Internet traffic have now tapered off, and supplies of converter boxes appear to have held out just fine.

11 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. It Worked by Surbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I must say, a federal government agency actually worked; albeit to the tune of two billion dollars.

    One can only wonder what one-thousand billion dollars can do.

    [/sarcasm]

    1. Re:It Worked by Skreems · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Since the cost of the transition was financed with a small portion of the proceeds from the sale of the old Analog spectrum, the whole thing was pretty clearly a net gain.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
  2. Well Done by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Reports indicate that the FCC received upwards of 300,000 calls on Friday from consumers seeking late help with the transition, but they were prepared, with over 4,000 operators available to handle problems. The FCC's DTV website also had over 3 million hits on Friday. Both phone and internet traffic have now tapered off, and supplies of converter boxes appear to have held out just fine.

    Much of my comment history has been dedicated to chastising the government when they get things wrong. I should also recognize when they get it right.

    Nice work, guys!

  3. Only in Slashdot will a totally unrelated... by freedom_india · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...discussion on something as mundane as Digital TV turn into Microsoft Bashing.
    Its Incredible.
    I mean we are discussing the transition from analog to digital TV and somehow the submitter thought to add his two cents in bashing up Microsoft.
    MythTV has it.
    Ubuntu has it.
    BUT NO! He has to bash Microsoft.
    What an asshole.

    --
    "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  4. Re:I made the switch. I switched to OFF by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Insightful
    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  5. Seriously, why should we care? by Zero_DgZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I "get" the background and the technological reasons to switch to digital TV and all that. But honestly, how many millions of our tax dollars are being wasted on this "dear god we need to drop everything and help everyone switch because lord knows we can't trust them to handle their own affairs!" game? Seriously. Why should we care? It's only television.

    Having to hear every four seconds about how it's going to be some kind of goddamned tragedy because some portion of lazy motherfuckers sitting on a couch somewhere can't be arsed to replace or upgrade their own equipment (or get someone to do it for them!) when we've been listening to the same goddamned twitter about this switch for three fucking years is really wearing thin. Now we're going to have to hear three more years of whining about how the new digital TV is no good, so-and-so can't get such-and-such channel anymore, and woe is me, my reception sucks now. I have a better idea: Why don't we just turn the whole thing the fuck off? I quit watching TV when I was a teenager and honestly, my life hasn't been any less enriched because of it. I have a TV, but it's an old analog one that I use as a monitor for my game consoles. I don't have cable, I don't have a converter box, and I don't even have a damn antenna for the thing. I don't care, and I don't see why anyone else should care enough to be treating this like some kind of disaster.

    Way back when this digital switchover was announced in the first place I held the vain hope that some portion of people might wake up and decide to do something else with themselves instead of park in front of their (soon to be useless) TV. Like, I dunno. Read a book. Learn some stuff on the Internet. Go the fuck outside for some reason other than to go to work or to the liquor store. Interact with real people. Learn something about the world.

    I don't characterize myself as a very smart person compared to most, and I'm fairly young and therefore am automatically assumed to lack experience. Yet somehow I am continually amazed at the sheer ignorance that many people I meet display about absolutely everything. Science, literature, fiction, history, geography, mechanics, anything. Yet they can recite to me chapter and verse what happened on Survivor or American Idol. The one that gets me is how they can complain to me about the war in Iraq, yet they don't actually know where Iraq is. These are people who are older than me -- people who should be "old enough to know better." Yet the only thing they know about the world is what they see through the damned box at the other end of the living room.

    And it pisses me off. These people don't need pampering. Let them flounder. Maybe it'll force them to learn something about the world, even if it's just some tiny inconsequential thing that they need to hook up to get their fucking idiot box working again.

    1. Re:Seriously, why should we care? by paralaxcreations · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I personally hope the griping about "i don't get reception" or "i wasn't prepared for the switch" stops as well. Hopefully, the self-righteous "I don't even watch TV" crowd will STFU then too.

      It's cool that you don't watch TV. But more than 238,000,000 people do...so, yeah. The DTV switch is kinda important.

  6. Re:I made the switch. I switched to OFF by sponga · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are enjoying the outside world so much you came to post on Slashdot?

    Where do you live that you have no UHF and can enjoy the outside world? Usually those two don't go hand in hand.

  7. Re:Wow manually edit configuration files. by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Never mind that I type and edit all day, editing a configuration file or typing

    What they type all day is English. What you're trying to get them to do is type in some weird computer-ese language that they don't understand.

  8. Re:Wow manually edit configuration files. by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only way the process could be automated is if you designed a mechanical robot to press keys on the keyboard for you.

    Or if the guide software edited the configuration for you, like it's supposed to. That would be automatic editing, would it not? Last I checked "mechanical" was nowhere in the definition of "automatic", therefore it can, by definition, be carried out by software.

  9. Re:Anecdote by akpoff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's another group of people who prefer the OTA signal: those of us who like quality of broadcast HD more than the over-compressed signal coming from the cable companies. And let's not forget those of us who don't want to pay for premium service that has as many commercials as the advertising-sponsored OTA broadcast of the same show.

    Sure, there are some folks out there who don't understand the issues and might complain. But there are groups who not only understand the issues but have made conscious decisions to eschew cable, dish and IPTV-subscription services (e.g., U-Verse) in favor of OTA, DVDs, internet-based VOD or some combination of the three.