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Digital TV Hotline Gets 700,000 Calls Over Switch

RYAN NAKASHIMA   06/13/09 09:50 PM ET   AP

Digital Tv

LOS ANGELES — Nearly 800,000 calls were received by a federal hot line this week from people confused about the nationwide move on Friday to drop analog TV signals and broadcast only in digital.

The Federal Communications Commission said that about 317,450 calls went into the help line, 1-888-CALL-FCC, on Friday alone, the day analog signals were cut off. Another 102,000 came in Saturday by 6 p.m. Eastern time.

The total is still below the 600,000 to 3 million callers that the FCC expected in early March would call on transition day.

The move to all-digital was delayed from Feb. 17, and ramped up efforts at spreading the word is credited with roughly halving the number of unprepared households since then. Nielsen Co. put the number of unready homes at 2.8 million, or 2.5 percent of the total television market, as of last Sunday.

FCC Acting Chairman Michael Copps said Saturday that if it were baseball, the digital transition is now closer to home plate.

"We're safe on third right now," he said. He added that thousands of FCC staff would continue to answer phones and help people whose TVs no longer work properly, at least through June.

"We all need a bit of patience and perseverance," he said. "This is a momentous change and it'll take time to get it right."

Dozens of mostly Hispanic TV watchers visited and called the Mercy Center, a community center in the Bronx, N.Y., to get more help. A staff of three has been on hand seven days a week for the last month.

"Up to now, it's been people wanting the equipment," said Judith Criado, the director of education at the center. "Today, everyone who has called has the equipment but they just don't know how to actually see the channels."

About a third of Friday's calls to the FCC were still about federal coupons to pay for digital converter boxes, an indication that at least 100,000 people still didn't have the right equipment to receive digital signals.

Another third of the calls were handled by live agents, and 30 percent of those were about how to operate the converter boxes. The FCC said most of the converter box questions were resolved when callers were told to re-scan the airwaves for digital frequencies.

Over 20 percent of the live calls were about reception issues. Antennas can be fickle, because digital signals travel differently than analog ones.

A weakly received analog channel might be viewable through some static, but channels broadcast in the digital language of ones and zeros are generally all or nothing.

"People just needed to upgrade their antenna or return the lower quality one for stronger antennas," said Debbie Byrd, an FCC staffer who only had three visitors to her Saturday help session at a library in the south-central Los Angeles area.

A majority of the 100 million U.S. households with TV sets were not affected by the drop of analog signals, because they receive them through their cable or satellite company.

As of Saturday, the FCC said 20 TV stations that had been on the air went dark because they had not set up their digital broadcast equipment yet.

The largest volume of calls to the FCC on Friday came from the Chicago area, followed by Dallas-Ft. Worth, New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore.

With 4,000 staffers manning the phones Friday, the average wait time per call was 4.6 minutes.

The FCC said its hot line was on track to receive another 150,000 calls on Saturday.

The National Association of Broadcasters said that 278 stations it surveyed nationwide received 35,500 calls on Friday, and the vast majority were resolved by re-scanning.

Any set hooked up to cable or a satellite dish is unaffected by the end of analog broadcasts, but around 17 million U.S. households rely on antennas. Nielsen Co. said poor and minority households were less likely to be prepared for Friday's analog shutdown, as were households consisting of people younger than 35.

The Commerce Department reported a last-minute rush for the $40 converter box coupons: It received 319,990 requests Thursday, nearly four times the daily average for the past month, and another 428,198 requests on Friday, for about 1.5 million since Monday. In all, the government has mailed coupons for almost 60 million converter boxes. The limit is two coupons per household.

It takes nine business days for a coupon to reach the mailbox.

For some procrastinators, that meant missing some important broadcasts.

Tuyen Luu waited until Friday to apply for a coupon at a nonprofit help center in Houston. By the time it arrives, the NBA finals could be over if the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Orlando Magic on Sunday. "I won't get to see Game 5," Luu said.

___

Associated Press Writer Arelis Hernandez in Houston and Technology Writer Peter Svensson in New York contributed to this report.

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LOS ANGELES — Nearly 800,000 calls were received by a federal hot line this week from people confused about the nationwide move on Friday to drop analog TV signals and broadcast only in digital.
LOS ANGELES — Nearly 800,000 calls were received by a federal hot line this week from people confused about the nationwide move on Friday to drop analog TV signals and broadcast only in digital.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gypsy508
07:36 PM on 06/16/2009
Don't understand the point. Analog signals are stronger than digital. It's just another rip-off of consumers, like the CD. There is no way I'm buying a new antenna. I'll find something else to do than watch TV if it's not free.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
09:55 PM on 06/14/2009
You can lead a horse to information, but you can't make him understand it. Some people can't process change.
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07:48 PM on 06/14/2009
I had Direct TV for about a year. When it worked it was fine, but it didn't work much of the time. It was more valuable as a weather predictor than anything else. My reception would go out EVERY time it rained or snowed. It would go out before it even started raining, and even a sprinkle would knock it out. Snow did the same thing, and if any snow collected on the dish structure, it wouldn't work until the snow had melted or was blown off by the wind. Sometimes I was without reception for 3 or 4 days. Direct TV customer service was worse than useless, but they sure cried when I canceled the service. Digital TV does seem to be a pox on the industry created solely to free up more bandwidth to sell off to the media conglomerates, while forcing people to use paid television (dis)service. Don't even get me started on my travails of dealing with the local cable company.
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07:58 PM on 06/14/2009
This post is off topic but was meant to be in response to someone sing the praises of Direct Tv. I live in an area were the broadcast signal is strong enough using a indoor antenna. The problem is that I have to adjust the antenna each time I switch stations, and it varies according to the time of day. It is frustrating to have to get up and adjust the antenna, just to find out that that station is broadcasting an infomercial and I will have to repeat the process as I move on to another channel.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
PCdoc
the time has come to grab the bull by the tail and
01:33 PM on 06/15/2009
I've had Directv for 7 years and never had any problems, either with the service or customer service. Never had an issue with snow (N.W. Illinois) and if a storm knocks out the signal, it's time to head for the basement.
06:31 PM on 06/14/2009
"Hullo, is this the gov-mint? I been a'livin' in a cave fer the past year. No, I ain't heared nothin' bout no digital? How's come my TEE-vee ain't a workin'?"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwayneosedach
06:08 PM on 06/14/2009
All this so the government could auction off the air ways to the highest bidder.
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jukesgrrl
Stop the Republican war on women's bodies.
08:32 PM on 06/14/2009
The ads that were run (constantly) in my area implied that this bandwidth was being freed-up solely to be used by emergency services for disaster preparedness. It was "for our own good," so I just figured it was a lie.
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gypsy508
07:39 PM on 06/16/2009
Don't forget all the addresses obtained for junk mailers who signed up for the free coupons.
socialtalker
this micro-bio is a great idea!
05:22 PM on 06/14/2009
i now no longer have us network tv for the first time in my life, (by choice) its rather strange. i am hoping to fill that time that was wasted with more productive activities. now if i can stop wasting time on the computer....
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Bongborg
Assimilated by the bong long
09:30 AM on 06/14/2009
It wasn't all just trouble with reception. The day before the changeover, two brothers in the town I work in were installing a new outdoor digital antenna at one's home and both died when one allowed the pole to contact a power line.
11:28 AM on 06/14/2009
Oh my god.. How horrible..
01:13 AM on 06/14/2009
What you are not hearing is that many of those who were prepared are still losing access to free television or losing channels. Digital signals are an all or nothing proposition. Either you receive it or you don't. Even after purchasing expensive antennas and the digital converter, you can still lose all free television...

I live in the heart of a large city. I have a digital converter and purchased an expensive indoor antenna. Since I live in an apartment complex, I couldn't purchase a more expensive outdoor antenna. Guess what? I lost over half of my channels and some of those that I do receive are pixilated, making them impossible to watch. With my television volume turned all the way up and the volume on the converter turned all the way up, I can barely hear the volume on half of the remaining channels. In addition, even though I have a 32" television, the converter displays many of the channels in a smaller video window even though in the setup, the Aspect ratio is set to automatic. Setting it to 4:3 aspect ratio is worse. So not only is it difficult to hear, but the size of the display is smaller too...

Not only has it cost me extra for a converter box and an antenna, it has made my expensive DVD/VCR player worthless. It seems as though all it was designed to do is force people into a paid television service...
02:45 AM on 06/14/2009
What "expensive" indoor antenna did you buy? A Terk? Stores get high profit margins on this crappy brand and push it left and right.

If you are having volume problems like that would suspect an issue with your converter box, do you have more than one? Can you try a friends?

There might be some programmable boxes out there that will work with your VCR, do some research.
03:16 AM on 06/14/2009
Basically after I spend several hundred $$$. I now have fewer channels and no way to record them on my VCR for later viewing. So are you saying that they sell converters for my VCR too so that I can run a wire from the converter to another converter to my VCR, which will allow me to record a few crappy channels???

I actually feel robbed by my own government so that they can benefit the cable and satellite service providers as well as the MSM. There is NOTHING better about digital that makes this worth forcing it on an entire population of analog viewers...

My crappy but expensive antenna is an amplified antenna that came from Radio Shack. My crappy digital converter was the only one that Best Buy offered...
03:20 AM on 06/14/2009
I do not have more than one converter and I don't know of anyone that I can borrow it from. Almost everyone around here has a television service. I think this conversion to digital was designed to force the rest of us who have held out to move to a television service. I see no other good reason to force this on us...

Analog signals reach far more people and even with a weak signal, you can watch through the snow. This digital signal is all or nothing, which by design reaches fewer people. Why would the government sign onto this unless they are benefiting those who make a profit off of television services???
02:49 AM on 06/14/2009
Yes but don't forget.... "it's progress!"
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gypsy508
07:47 PM on 06/16/2009
Of course. Digital = progress. Someday we will have digitalized people and digitalized sex and digitalized food and they will be superior too. We already have digital music and it sounds soooo much better, doesn't it?. Mp3s have ushered in a whole new renaissance in music, inspiring artists and listeners everywhere. Because you see, digital is fake and man-made so it has to be progress.
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asmir
Cancer Awareness, We Must Find a Cure!
11:56 PM on 06/13/2009
People thought they would get another 6 months. Very ignorant to say the least. I will say one thing my Directv has the best picture on my new TV that I've ever seen. Glad I hooked it up in Dec 08. Hate to think how long these folks will have to wait to get satellite or cable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsIrisMG
Why not me?
01:44 PM on 06/14/2009
I've actually chosen not to have cable and thus far I am about 30 years without it, as TV is not the main point in my life. What I like to watch, PBS and qubo, is available for free via my digital converter box. Any other program is available via DVD through Netflix, provided I have time away from family and hobbies to watch them.

The $40+ I would have given to the cable companies is available for charities, people in need, or anything else I choose to do. My not having cable has nothing to do with lack of intelligence.

Thank you.
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03:09 PM on 06/14/2009
Someone who can think clearly about the value of TV! And may you spread that philosophy far and wide. Not having cable has to do with actually having functional intelligence. Engaging in what used to be called "real life". Anyone else remember that?

Almost everyone today is a slave to the cell phone, blackberry, text messaging, videogames, computer or HDTV. Most of you are not the master of these devices, but their slave. Turn 'em off, if you're not.

Go visit an old person, make a meal for a poor person, take a kid to a park, write the next great American novel, join Habitat for Humanity, mow the sick neighbor's lawn, get involved with your church...you catch the drift. Thanks for the refresher, Iris.
07:55 PM on 06/14/2009
"My not having cable has nothing to do with lack of intelligence."

Perhaps your not having cable is a sign of intelligence, not lack of it? I choose not to pay for television as well and see no reason to do so unless my government forces it on me, as they seem to be trying to do with this digital conversion. Analog signals reach far more people than digital, so this digital conversion reaches far fewer people, by design. To me, it appears to be an attempt to force people into television services that they have not wanted nor needed, until now...
socialtalker
this micro-bio is a great idea!
05:24 PM on 06/14/2009
i think my sister also has directtv and is very happy with it.
11:44 PM on 06/13/2009
What? Are people THAT stupid. The information has been all over the news for almost a year.

Argh.
12:45 AM on 06/14/2009
The people who were left unprepared until the 12th were mostly old or non-English speakers, who didn't understand what was going on or what they needed to do to prepare for it. Now that it's actually cut off, they'll figure it out or get help.
01:36 AM on 06/14/2009
Exactly what I was going to post. This has been publicized mildly for the past 2 to 3 years and really intense publicity has been all over network affiliates for nearly a year! If people were caught with their pants down, they have nobody to blame but themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsIrisMG
Why not me?
10:40 PM on 06/13/2009
To those whose TVs didn't work today - you didn't miss anything, slow news day. Hope you enjoyed your movie!
10:13 PM on 06/13/2009
Tgis must be a Marxixt/Socialist/Communist Plan I woke up and my TV was out! This is what our Idiotic Lord Glenn Beck was talking about! Oh God they are going to be sending us to FEMA camps! Your Plasma TV's will will turn into slaves! Run for the hills until 2012 then vote GOP! Only Palin and her bible thumping ignorance can save us now!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
novatom
09:23 PM on 06/13/2009
I can't believe all the idiotic comments from the self righteous prix on this board. Bottom line, this was an unprecedented type of project on the part of government
09:02 PM on 06/13/2009
The bottom line is moving the country off the analog signal really does not to help the country. Those who benefit from the the conversion are the ones who hired lobbyists to get the additional bandwith. The federal government was pushed out of the picture. A good example is 911 frequencies and those for Homeland security. That was the purpose of pushing the public off. But lobbyist were able to take them all. In the mean time, with no box having a built in antenna, stringing a cable to an antenna on a roof can not only be expensive, but also difficult for the disabled or elderly. This was done on the cheap.

I was able to get three boxes including an extra for my roommate. I didn't pay anything extra. I live in LA CA,. And have 86 channels coming in crystal clear. I also have digital cable and each TV can easily switch back and fourth by using universal remotes that came with the TV sets. I really like the free digital. 5 different PBS stations, each with multiple channels. I have old laptops set up so I can record on them like TiVo. I can put the programs in any format I want and sent them. ..Doesn't cost me a dime. If more frequencies are sold, I can see free digital out performing cable.

I don't need a 1080 and after 6 feet, you cannot notice the difference
08:59 PM on 06/13/2009
They probably don't believe in evolution either. Now that would be an interesting poll.
What are the beliefs and politics of the people who missed this change for that last 2 years.