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Blessings2You 12-13-2008 06:23 PM

Digital TV is coming....
 
This is something I just had published in a local paper. Thought you might like to read my valued opion. :rolleyes:


TV OR NOT TV

I hadn’t really invested much time thinking about our television set until just lately. To tell you the truth, I can’t remember the brand. I think it’s Magnavox, but that may have been the previous set. Sony? Take your pick; they both sound right to me. I think it’s about a 21" screen, but I’m not going to get up and go measure it. It’s big enough to see from across the room, small enough to fit in the cubby next to the bird cage.

Recently I have been forced to think about it, due to the exponential escalation in the number of reminders about the impending changeover to all-digital. I understand that this will be legally mandated, though I’m not sure why. I suspect it has been explained to me, no doubt more than once, but then, so was algebra. We have been assured by the on-screen powers-that-be that, since we have a satellite dish, we are immune from the various awful things that will befall the unprepared. I considered sending for the coupons and purchasing a converter box, just in case terrorists blow up the satellite system or something, but I’ve procrastinated almost long enough to make that a moot point. Our working theory is that whenever the Magnavox/Sony conks out, anything we might buy will have the necessary technology, whatever it is.

The last time I bought a TV, the choices were black and white, or color. Now I don’t even understand the choices. I’ve done a little research, mostly to avoid making a total fool of myself by answering “I have no clue” when the next person asks if we have hi-def. How embarrassing to have to be informed that HDTV is not a cable channel, but a whole new way of looking at, say, football.

I unearthed a recent issue of Consumer Reports and checked out the article that attempts to explain the various options and how to choose. Most of it was gibberish by the time it got past my bifocals. Technologically, I am barely beyond the stage of wondering how Captain Kangaroo got inside the little box. I was slack-jawed by the time I perused the pros and cons of plasma and pondered what LCD and CRT might possibly represent. My heart missed a beat when I came to the question, “Do you need full 1080p resolution?” Um, as opposed to what? What does the “p” stand for? What if I say no, and I really do need it for something? Is this a trick question?

There was one sentence in the article that was clear enough to get my attention: “You can get a decent LCD for under $1000.” I looked for the punch line, but there wasn’t one. Are they KIDDING? A thousand dollars for a TELEVISION? There’s nothing being televised now that would motivate me to spend that kind of money to see it more clearly and hear it better, and I can’t imagine things will change that much for the better.

We do have a second TV, more or less, and it isn’t ready for the apocalypse either. I bought the cheap little set somewhere, probably Walmart, with a built-in VCR (shows you how long ago THAT was) but I had a little problem setting it up. I thought I pressed the right buttons as I went from screen to screen, but I did something wrong. Apparently do-overs are not allowed. I tried several times to back out and start over, but I ended up in a digital loop straight out of Groundhog Day. I decided to turn it off and unplug it, figuring that over time it would revert to its natural state and I could start over. That was probably about two years ago. My theory is, either the first theory will work out, or maybe an antique dealer will come along and make me an offer on it. It’s already vintage.

Back in the forties, my Dad attended Coyne Institute in Chicago, and learned to repair radios and televisions, eventually working for Television Specialists in Windsor, then in Claremont. In the early fifties, someone gave my dad a non-operating old clunker, a heavy square box full of tubes that Dad resuscitated, and it was more or less faithful to us for many years. When something gave out, my father patiently repaired or eventually replaced the faulty part. I remember him sitting with a schematic spread out on the kitchen table, the maroon-handled soldering gun smoking as he cobbled the old set together again, just in time for that evening’s round of westerns and What’s My Line?

We’ve had our primary TV for a few years. I’m thinking eight or ten, but maybe not. Sometimes when you push the button to increase the volume, the channel changes, so we use the remote to adust the volume now, even Bob. The last time I made a comment about getting the thing repaired, the person to whom I was speaking chortled, “You’re kidding, right?” So I keep it going by giving it a firm look when it flickers or makes an odd sound, and saying “Don’t you dare!” But just in case that method stops working, I do have a plan. When this dinosaur finally gives up the ghost, we’ll remove the insides, and Bob and I will take turns standing behind the screen making faces at each other.

tkrik 12-13-2008 07:26 PM

B2Y - Well written. :hug: I really enjoyed reading this and I am sure others will as well.

I got a good laugh out of the last paragraph. That was funny.

SallyC 12-13-2008 09:20 PM

LOL, Blessings. I'm at a loss about all this stuff too. I Have T/W cable, so I think I'm safe, but the price is probably going up. I just have basic cable, though, so I hope it's enough.

I happen to need a new TV, so will wait to see which one will be my best bet at the cheapest possible price.:rolleyes:

I really don't understand why this is all mandated and now, we really have no choice at all..:mad: This is still a free country, Yes?:rolleyes:

doydie 12-14-2008 12:33 AM

Last year on the before Christmas sales at Sams, my DH saw his dream. a 52 in HDTV for a WONDERUL price. We didn't have the money right then because of Christmas so we waited for the first paycheck after Christmas. We didn't know it was a special Christmas sale. We thought that a Sams price was a Sams price. So we waited and finally got a floor model at Circuit City for hundreds off its price.

Dejibo 12-14-2008 10:02 AM

since I have a camper/trailor and a couple of TVs that use the antenae to get a signal, I got the convertor boxes. I was not about to buy new TVs for the camper. The coupon was for $40 and the box was $49, so $9 for an upgrade wasnt such a bad deal.

I agree that for such an expensive investment, THERE IS NOTHING ON! we flip channels all the time saying "dang, there is NOTHING on!" we pay a small fortune for cable each month, and the pay channels cant even show stuff from THIS century! We are watching pretty woman, and weekend at Bernies, and Lord of the Rings. This stuff was made LAST century! While I love Fried Green Tomatoes, I want to see movies that have been made in the last 2 to 5 years on my PAY channels.

its all a rip off! My husband has long wanted to turn off the cable, and use an antenae hooked to the roof. now I have the boxes, I guess we can get away with it. would save us tons of money!

Becca44 12-14-2008 03:48 PM

Paul and I were talking about this the other day. We have two TVs, neither of them HDTV transition ready, we haven't yet decided to buy new TVs or converter boxes; I'm pretty sure we'll have to replace our antenna, too.

So... in the midst of coming up with a plan, we decided to just.... let TV go. We've lived without it before, no big deal until we got used to having it around. We were more productive (reading, exercising, making art) then anyway and besides, we still have the internet, public radio, netflicks, what have you.

So the new plan is to have no plan and deal with the conversion whenever and if ever. I'm not going to freak out in prep for this mandated thing-a-ma-bob. In fact, the more I think about the panic the networks must be in about keeping us all hooked, the less I'm inclined to get sucked in.

:)

LoisLane 12-14-2008 10:40 PM

DTV is A-OK
 
Great article, B2Y! How cool to get published in the paper. My dad writes silly poems and such and they have found their way into his local paper, too.

We have chosen to keep cable out of our budget for years so I signed up for the coupons on the converter boxes right away. Hubby wasn't too inclined to use it in the living room so I installed a box in the guest room where I tend to make my retreat. The rabbit ears aren't strong enough to get all the stations so I wasn't using it. I was curious how it would work if we attached it to the roof top antenna. We get so many additional stations! Our favorite is RTN = Retro Television Network. We get to see all the classics like Rockford Files, Emergency, Adam 12, The A-Team, Magnum PI, Quincy, McCloud, Sheriff Lobo, BJ and the Bear... There just isn't much on these days. The old stuff hits the spot!

Blessings2You 12-16-2008 06:23 AM

We're so excited! All the TV stations are going to run a TEST of everybody's TV tonight at 7:58! You know, in case there's any living human who has missed the twelve million public announcements. We haven't decided whether to make popcorn for the special occasion, or go with our regular snacks. Ooooooh, I can hardly wait! Only another 12 hours and 34 minutes until the big moment! Maybe we'll take the phone off the hook....

sabimax 12-16-2008 08:30 AM

lol B2Y, hehehe

we have DirectTV..I guess that isnt affected?? unsure...dont really care either...as someone put it..if I watch less TV...I bet family and I would be more productive...hugsss,sarah


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