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Originally posted by mtmind
Novus' question and the response got me thinking. (Sometimes that doesn't happen). Broadcasters must go digital. This does not mean you have to have cable. How do they broadcast the digital signal over the "air". Would not the digital information have to be contained inside a radio frequency? And each channel would still need some sort of frequency or transport method of getting this digital signal to us.
I know they already do it cause I can get High Definition with a rabbit ear antenna. But I don't know any more than that.
As to what Tvs are and are not digital, If you have a TV with a "High Definition Tuner" you have a digital TV. Other wise you most likely do not.
They sell Receiver/Converters to get the digital signal and make it usable for your Analog tvs.
Mtmind
Originally posted by NovusOrdoMundi
Digital and analog - what is it's relation with TV? Such as, the difference in both, and what TV's are and aren't digital or analog.
Originally posted by John_Q_Llama
So what in the world would the government want that band of frequencies for?
Originally posted by jimmy1200
well, it could just be because analog uses up to much bandwidth
Originally posted by jpm1602
The gov wanted this bandwith seven years ago but were put off for a time.
Now they will give hundreds of millions for it.
Regards
John
Originally posted by John_Q_Llama
If you are familiar with amateur radio, you can listen to digital transmissions of a different kind. Imagine recording a conversation that you are having with someone by using morse code. If you were to play back that recording and speed it up to the point where the beeps of the communication last no more than part of a second, you'd end up with this constant high pitched tone. That's what ham radio digital transmissions, or RTTY as it is termed, sounds like. People can use RTTY on amateur frequencies to have computers communicate with each other thanks to the speed of the transmissions.