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![]() "American Insurgent" wrote in message ups.com... Many programs are not yet in full HDTV, including ABC World News. This results in blank space on the sides. Some commercials are in standard def, which on HDTV makes additional blank space on the top and bottom, giving an effect of the signal "floating" on a sea of darkness. Some channels will NEVER be "HDTV". The system only ALLOWS for HDTV. The stations have the choice of either a single HDTV channel, OR up to FIVE lower resolution channels. I can see most network channels running HD only during prime time or sporting events for the most part, while leaving the option open to run other services during the day. Furthermore, the signal was jerky, like streaming internet video, with frequent pixelation. I even lost the signal for a few seconds, after which I checked to see if there was a "trip wire" in the settings that I could turn down or off. I once had a Panasonic TV that would give you a blue screen if the signal got too low. That I could turn off; this I can't. If the signal gets too low with the Samsung STB, it will give you a "weak signal" screensaver. You will need an outdoor antenna to get a good usable digital signal. Where rabbit ears, etc. type indoor antennas can normally get a usable (though often poor) picture, they will not work well for a digital stream. My setup at first wouldn't pick up several stations with the slew buttons; I had to download an HDTV channel list off the net, then manually enter those stations into memory. Even more confusing, the Samsung box lists channels not by their HDTV assignment, but by their standard def channel, a hyphen, and a subchannel, ex. 6-1, 6-2, and 6-3 instead of Channel 53. You can USE the HD channel, but it switches you right back to this hyphenated system on the display. I suppose this is to ease the transition, and to allow subchannels, but you are left not only with two channel numbers for one station but something less than true HDTV, since stations force two or three services onto one HD channel. I doubt that was the FCC's intention. Again, it's not HDTV, it's DIGITAL TV, with the OPTION for the station to use the entire bandwidth for an HDTV signal. I suspect that when people realize that they're being forced into HDTV- with beaucoup dollar amounts required to switch-only to get standard def, they'll be mad. I'm an electronics geek anyway, so for me it was worth it. But Joe Sixpack will spend this sort of outlay and find his HD experience reduced so that his local TV station can bring him 24 hour weather or music videos, and start talking a blue streak. Joe Sixpack most likely doesn't even notice a difference between HD and Analog (though there is one, most don't notice or care... after working as a repair tech for decades, I've seen it more than a few times where a customer would gripe about how their picture looked worse after I changed a CRT... of course it did.. with the 3/4 dead CRT that was replaced, they couldn't see the ghosting or the snow. ![]() |
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