Does anyone here ever rip a DVD? If you have then you've noted that the best quality you're going to get is an MPEG-4 codec straight from the disc. The disc is ALREADY in MPEG-2 format so you're converting once past the original uncompressed to MPEG-2 conversion.
Ever convert an MPEG-4 AVI to MPEG-2 and then back again? If you check fileshare programs you see it has been done repeatedly. Why? Many movies are splooged onto the net in AVI form only and a lot of people still like burning them to Video-CD which is MPEG-2.
The result is crud. Like a high compression moving JPEG image.
Enough said, really. Unless and until the following take place, it makes no sense:
1. Supermajority of programming delivered to Dish as MPEG-4 to begin with. Anyone remember not long ago the Dish versus Direct, who is compressed and fuzzy more than the other arguments?
2. All installations are cleaned up to even stricter standards
MPEG-4 is even more wonky and less forgiving than MPEG-2. Most satellite guys know absolutely NOTHING about the concept of signal reflection and impedance mismatch. Tight drip loops, tight bends, kinked cable, too many splices, improperly applied fittings, etc. will all contribute to screwing up the signal and affect the integrity of the digital stream. Cable guys who do cable modem, especially old timers, know this.
Rain fade will become a very real problem for a lot of people and a lot of people looking through the fringes of trees will see degradation. MPEG-4 just doesn't play well with bit errors and if we then add parity and whatnot, we just take up with overhead all of our savings.
Charlie pushes this and he will prove out the very reasons the cable operators are going slow on MPEG-4 despite their public interest. Privately, engineering is no more ready to adopt this than they were to push pre-DOCSIS high speed data over messy RG-59 dominated systems, remove noise filters with noisy IW all over, etc. Sometimes they get pushed by corporate, but the screwing around with customer service levels grows too big to ignore and engineering gets their time to correct things properly.
This would be like ignoring the engineers, and reality of installation quality, and forging ahead to a place where DTV and cable eat a number of their customers. SBC especially should faint at the notion of this, never mind shareholders.
They need to spend less time jamming more content in that no one is watching and is forced to get in their bundle that they don't want, and more time putting in content that more people crave.