are you claiming that cable is a competitive market?
The networks also make money by selling their signals to the cable and satellite providers.
Cable an satellite providers offer more stations,
however their best signal resolution is inferior to what is sent out over the airwaves because of the compression algorithms they need to use cram so many channels into the bandwidth they have available.
What's the issue then? How much do the OTA networks get per subscriber?
There is no issue, just a statement of fact. You should ask the networks/cable/satellite companies that if you're interested in finding out that detail.
more stations then who? Than OTA obviously.
OTA DVB is also compressed. How so?
It's a well known fact that the best picture quality comes to you over the air,
Too bad Canadian network signals are of such poor strength !!!
more stations then who? Than OTA obviously.
OTA DVB is also compressed. How so?
I'm not disputing that, but a lot of people seem to think that OTA DTV is not compressed.
Do you have numbers to back this up?
For example, CITYTV's Woodstock transmitter has an ERP of over a Megawatt.
ERP's from the CN tower are limited by the CRTC due to the larger population center close by.
Hmmmm. The transmission power numbers are on the Internet (a Google search will get you that quickly), and typically lower than Buffalo's. Is it any wonder that I can receive a Buffalo station clearly all the time in Richmond Hill and never CTV, with about the only one from Toronto that never pixilates being CBC within the GTA? I'd call that poor signal strength any day!
This doesn't make any sense, obviously. Broadcasters and cable companies are not the same thing.
I don't remember stating or alluding to anything stating that broadcasters and cable companies were the same. I simply stated that cable companies an satellite providers offer more channels than are available over the air, but of poorer resolution, with many being essentially copies of the same programming garbage, i.e. CBC, CTV, Global, etc. on multiple channels.
In order to squeeze the data into a 6MHz wide channel, the signals are MPEG encoded (MPEG is a form of compression) rate shaped and limited to 19.8Mb/s.
Since you seem to be in the know about OTA signals, does OTA use MPEG2 or MPEG4?
There are other issues that TV watchers should be pushing for rather than taking the inferior crap being pushed on all of us by broadcasters, cable companies and satellite companies alike.
Since you seem to be in the know about OTA signals, does OTA use MPEG2 or MPEG4?
Is it any wonder that I can receive a Buffalo station clearly all the time in Richmond Hill and never CTV,
This isn't an issue either. You have no right to TV viewing. If you don't like what is offered by common carriers, don't subscribe.
Currently, MPEG2, but that could change.
Yes it is a wonder. I can receive everything from the CN tower, plus some from Buffalo and Rochester. Maybe your antenna is not aimed correctly.
BTW, ERP is the number to look for, not transmitter power.
CTV the leader in the save local tv campaign recently bought Dr Oz, Vampire Diaries and the remake of V. while simultaneously crying for more money for "local tv"
CTV Hypocrisy Television