You may very well be right ,but one has nothing to do with the other.noremac said:Excellent! We are just at the beginning of "mainstream" cable networks converting to HD. I predict in just a couple of years most of these networks (History, TLC, CNN, etc.) will have HD feeds. Afterall, analog broadcast goes dark in less than 2-1/2 years.
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History Channel and The Military Channel are under the "Discovery" umbrella, which has an HD feed already. I've seen more than a few shows on the Military Channel that were excellent quality and I'm guessing were downconverted from HD video, not to mention The Road to Baghdad, which was in HD and shown on Discovery HD Theatre. As for TLC, isn't Trading Spaces a TLC show ?? It's definitely done in HD and shown on Discovery HD Theatre.noremac said:I predict in just a couple of years most of these networks (History, TLC, CNN, etc.) will have HD feeds.
The channels listed above are not over-the-air broadcasts so they're 100% unaffected by the topic (that you've misunderstood).Afterall, analog broadcast goes dark in less than 2-1/2 years.
Yeah, I know. Been keeping up with digital TV for a few years now.dslate69 said:Analog OTA broadcasting going dark has 0 effect on channels that aren't analog OTA like the ones you mentioned.
Well I believe in 5-7 years we will be swimming in HD. But when Analog OTA goes dark we will see Digital channels OTA not HD channels OTA. With 90% of the programing still in SD on OTA HD channels now, I believe the switch to digital will be just that; not a switch from 4:3 to 16:9. All the independent channels will still be showing Seinfeld and Andy Griffith in SD.noremac said:Yeah, I know. Been keeping up with digital TV for a few years now.
The point was that the American television audience is going to quickly become immersed in ATSC broadcasts, most of which will be HD. The sales of ATSC-ready sets are already skyrocketing and FCC manufacturer requirements are driving that. There will be a resulting expectation that all networks, including the major cable ones, will have to deliver HD feeds to remain competitive.
And in 5-7 years when DTV/HD is really the expected norm, and 80% of cable networks are feeding HD, and all OTA is HD, what will Dish's business plan look like? How the heck can they feed all the LIL's as well as national cable networks in HD? They won't have close to enough bandwidth.
LASooner said:29HDNetwork
With a laser-like focus, the upcoming HD channel is targeted at 29 year olds that have an HDTV.
www.movieline.com/features/29hd.shtml
Wow... talk about your niche programming.