Then my 2 (Yes, I get two one from Arkansas and one from Monroe) PBS channels just suck. They both have 3 sub channels and 13.1 and 12.1 look like HD.Crap.
And, BTW, I'm not PBS bashing. I like PBS... Otherwise I wouldn't have noticed the picture
Unfortunately, the PBS model of working with funds primarily from the local viewer and business market - subsidized by less than 5% - at tops - of government funding, makes for an extremely variable viewing experience for PBS users - depending on the market in which those stations exist.
In Chicago, WTTW [channel 11] is now part of a merger with what was once WFMT, an FM broadcasting facility which has extremely deep pockets. The engineering department at WTTW is extremely talented and has the full resources of Eastern Illinois University - on who's campus both facilities are housed. Both are at the forefront of broadcast technology and have pioneered much of the technology used in the broadcast industry today.
The other public broadcasting station in Chicago, WYCC, is run by the City Colleges of Chicago - another institution with deep pockets and an excellent technology group behind the operation of the station.
There's an interesting backlash developing in the home-entertainment community and some interesting news partners are beginning to take notice of that fact.
WIRED Magazine [
Magazine*| Wired.com], in the Sept 2010 Edition [Number 18.09], has an excellent article
"THE NEW GUIDE: It's Not About What To Watch. It's About How To Watch It."
Because WIRED does not post links to their magazines online until the middle of the first week of the month for which the magazine is published - in this case, September 2010, the link posted above is for the main page of the WIRED Magazine website - I cannot post a direct link to the article at this time.
Extremely encompassing in all entertainment delivery models, the gist of the article is that no one has to pay for TV any more . . . promoting the model of getting entertainment from the INTERNET and the myriad free resources - highly promoting the digital broadcast mode.
Compromised of more than twelve pages, there is a lot of discussion about abandoning the greed model of cable and satellite delivery - via which 90% of the delivered content in any package is never watched and only 10% is of real interest to the subscriber.
While an acknowledgment of the fact that some content will have to be forgone as part of the digital off-the-air method, as a primary accepted delivery method, and acknowledging that ROKU, TIVO, APPLE TV, HULU, NETFLIX, AMAZON VIDEO on Demand, and iTunes can, when coupled with a decent PC or MAC, and integrated with a good home network, give serious augmentation to over-the-air content, they keep favoring, and, in fact, in their summarization at the end of the article, promotes broadcast HD television as the second best medium after Blu-Ray, ranking delivery medium in order of quality - from BEST to WORST - to wit:
BLU-RAY: Full 1080p resolution at 48 Mbps - best video and audio currently available.
[digital] OVER-THE-AIR-BROADCAST: Even though most is the older MPEG-2 standard, networks broadcast HD at an average data rate of 19.4 Mbps - putting both satellite and cable to shame.
CABLE / FIBER [tie]: Both use proprietary compression and neither will talk about bitrates.
SATELLITE: Both Dish Network and DirectTV will not talk about bitrates or compression algorithms either and both providers transmit their HD content at between 6 and 8 Mbps - when transmitting their BEST content. Much of what is sent HD by Dish and Direct is at a significantly lower bandwidth.
VUDU: [Owned by WALMART, incidentally] Vudu is the only video-on-demand service that offers shows in 1080p resolution AT A DECENT DATA RATE. While other services offer the 1080p resolution, both the data rate, and the speed at which the content is delivered are at the mercy of the content provider's servers, and adjusted based on the recipient's networks capability; Vudu maintains a constant data rate to deliver true 1080p resolution - even though it may take longer to deliver the content.
DVD: While not hi-def in resolution, the DVD transfer rate of up to 9.8 Mbps generally delivers a higher resolution than most Internet delivery services. With a good Blu-Ray player, up-conversion usually makes for an exceptional experience when a standard DVD is up-converted.
iTUNES / AMAZON [tie]: Lots of compression and lower bitrates - generally around 3 Mbps give a drastic reduction in quality to the delivered product.
NETFLIX Instant: Netflix goes for seamless delivery over picture quality. If your broadband connection is not reliable, both services cut back on the quality of the delivered content.
HULU: The quality speaks for itself and, on a big-screen, is mostly unwatchable.
As more and more people begin to feel the effects of this non-economic recovery, and also discover the advantages of the exceptionally high-quality of many of the network feeds available off the air - via digital television, along with their discovery of the ability to view content from the Internet, I honestly believe the greed model adopted by both cable and satellite companies will begin to shed subscribers by the hundreds of thousands.
There are some great digital off-the-air resources available for finding off-the-air content, creating a list of required equipment - antennas, towers, amplifiers, cabling, and even finding someone to install it all and make it work, on the Internet.
The best of these, with links to many other resources, is AntennaWeb.org.
TitanTV.com will give you a complete listing of what's available for watching via digital off-the air in whatever part of the country you live.
To ask people to pay hundreds of dollars per month - for content which is, in many cases, free, is a non-sustainable model which will fall apart without any additional help from Charlie and the new manglement staff at Dish Network.