Digital TV Hotline Gets 700,000 Calls Over Switch

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RYAN NAKASHIMA | June 13, 2009 08:50 PM EST | AP

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Bill Bigin, center, looks over at his wife Kitty, left, as Steven Langan, vice president of the Antenna King, right, flips through their channels to see which stations are still broadcasting in analog at their apartment in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Friday June 12, 2009. Langan will have to install a new antenna on the Bigin's roof to pick up the digital signal as the conversion box the Bigin's bought is not enough for their transition from analog to digital. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

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.

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"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.

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.
Filed by Nick Sabloff
 
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My main problem with the switch was/is that those of us with low incomes (though I don't own a television myself) would not be able to purchase a t.v. new enough to accommodate this transition. The converter boxes were a neat idea, along with the vouchers, however, they ran out of vouchers very quickly and the vouchers did not cover the full cost of the box.

For many people, especially the elderly, disabled and housebound, watching PBS and the like was a way to stay informed.

Thanks to the government for once again, realizing the profit and not the people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 06/13/2009
- ChaiKat I'm a Fan of ChaiKat 8 fans permalink
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That's my issue with it. My dad and his wife are retired and are trying to cut expenses, so they wanted to cancel their satellite. Well, they got the equipment for the change over, but when you connectt it and it searches for channels, all the channels, (15) are not seen well. You keep getting a screen that says "signal lost" or "signal low"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 06/13/2009

Try an in-line amplifier to the antenna (if it's an outdoor antenna). The channel master 7777 works well to boost the signal.

Too bad all the antenna installers are long gone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 AM on 06/14/2009
- reynoljh I'm a Fan of reynoljh 20 fans permalink
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Just think, in three weeks, the digital age will be completely normal and we will look askance at this confusion. The same will happen whenever we finally decide to make the ultimate transition: from the arcane, archaic, confusing English system of measurement to the metric system. The English made that transition decades ago!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 06/13/2009
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What about hunkering over the radio on Saturday night, after working the fields for the last twelve hours and taking a bath in a #2 wash tub. Can't wait to hear the Grand Old Opera and someone tells you there changing every option, if you don't pay up? Boy, that can hurt a poor guy/girl/kid!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 06/13/2009
- BFare I'm a Fan of BFare 3 fans permalink

Can't wait to hear the Grand Old Opera and someone tells you there changing every option, if you don't pay up? Boy, that can hurt a poor guy/girl/kid!"

Um... what? No matter. I guess it's better than taking a #2 in a bath wash tub.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 06/13/2009

"The English made that transition decades ago!"

um, no they didn't...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 06/13/2009
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The English went to the metric system in 1965. 4.4 decades ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 PM on 06/13/2009
- BFare I'm a Fan of BFare 3 fans permalink

Maybe speaking English makes you one? But yes, they are on the metric system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 PM on 06/13/2009
- hark I'm a Fan of hark 113 fans permalink

Not so. You don't have to do anything to transfer to the digital age except have the right equipment to begin with, as 99% of us did. It was completely transparent.

Not so with switching to a different system of measure. Our brains have been wired to think in the English system, and switching over is a long process, and some older people will never be able to actually "think" in metrics. They will always be translating metrics back into English.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 06/13/2009
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You'd be surprised what you can learn if you really had to. After two days in Australia I was perfectly fluent in metrics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 PM on 06/13/2009
- amdezurik I'm a Fan of amdezurik 38 fans permalink

not "wired", just conditioned by habit

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 06/13/2009
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This has been known about for how long, and people are still unprepared?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 06/13/2009

Years. Literally.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 06/13/2009
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Good grief. These people have known about the switch forever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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My family ran 2 television stations. Take my advice, throw out the TV and read.

Digital broadcasting enables hypnosis quite easily; it enables control of what you think about.

The gov't's stated purpose of freeing up the analog channels is BS. What they are REALLY doing is setting up a system that can be controlled to the last pixel (not by you).

They WILL be using it to watch YOU. This is fact. Do a little research. Look up the various recent patents that allow the very screen itself to be used as a camera lens. And ANY speaker can also serve as a microphone (common knowledge).

Subliminal messaging is effective and easy to do on a digital system, both through frequencies you can't consciously hear as well as the metered use of light to put you in a receptive trance.

Go ahead and scoff. That won't change the fact that it is happening, and that you are the target. The government is acting as a cover for corporate interests. You are being closely watched and studied so that you can be milked for money.

It's like IO in The Matrix, being sucked on by tubes and wires you can't even see because you don't know enough to filter it. There will plenty of "Mr. Smiths" that will try to persuade you otherwise, so take the trouble to research it - there's no excuse for ignorance with a computer in front of you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 06/13/2009

I got my Tinfoil Hat on, and am scanning the skies for the Black Helicopters, God help anyone who wants to take my guns.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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Ever been to a county fair, King? I used to be involved in the hiring and contractual relations of the acts on various stages at ours.

One of them was a guy named Terry Stokes, a hypnotist whom I'll use as one example, but most of them work in a similar way. Loudspeakers onstage are aimed at the volunteers to be hypnotized. What the volunteers hear is music; but what their brains hear are subliminal messages encoded into the music that make them go under easily and quickly.

This, and the control of the stage lighting by the hypnotist, causes even strong-willed people to succumb - they can't even help it because it's not a conscious process.

I've seen MANY of my friends and acquaintances behave in outrageous ways that contradict their normal personalities. It's not that difficult to do, and these same techniques are amplified in effect by digital means, to affect MILLIONS of people.

Metered lighting that increases mental receptivit­y/passivit­y has been a part of the advertising game for years.

Open your mind. You sound ignorant, but there's a cure for that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 PM on 06/13/2009
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You don't like own a gun, do you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 06/13/2009
- clocknova I'm a Fan of clocknova 2 fans permalink
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Is that you, Eric Blair?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 06/13/2009
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A little knowledge may be a dangerous thing, but clearly no knowledge is worse.

NO, a CRT CANNOT be used as a camera lens... and most HDTVs are LCD or plasma, which likewise cannot be used as a camera lens, not even close... and even if they COULD, your TV cannot TRANSMIT, it has no transmitte­r... and if it DID have a transmitter, it would have to have an assigned frequency, and there would have to be a receiver to receive that frequency.­... which means either a van parked outside everyones home, OR a transmitter powerful enough in your TV that you'd be getting about a $500,000 electric bill every month... not to mention interference with everyone else's tv... etc. etc. etc.

Get a flipping grip.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:35 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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Is that so? Maybe you will grace us with your superior knowledge about Apple's patent on this very technology. Here's one link of many such patents:

http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PG01&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=%2220060007222%22.PGNR.&OS=DN/20060007222&RS=DN/20060007222

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 PM on 06/13/2009

pwned

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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Power line communication or power line carrier (PLC), also known as Power line Digital Subscriber Line (PDSL), mains communication, power line telecom (PLT), or power line networking (PLN), is a system for carrying data on a conductor also used for electric power transmission. Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) uses PLC by sending and receiving radio signals over power lines to provide access to the Internet.

This system is in active use.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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Integrated sensing display
Document Type and Number:
United States Patent Application 20060007222
Kind Code:
A1

Abstract:
An integrated sensing display is disclosed. The sensing display includes display elements integrated with image sensing elements. As a result, the integrated sensing device can not only output images (e.g., as a display) but also input images (e.g., as a camera).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:06 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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Let me refute your points a little more directly:
"NO, a CRT CANNOT be used as a camera lens... and most HDTVs are LCD or plasma, which likewise cannot be used as a camera lens, not even close"

They can and are, as shown by the patents below.

"even if they COULD, your TV cannot TRANSMIT, it has no transmitter"
Does your computer have atransmitter? Yet it regularly "phones home" at the whim of software companies. Furthermore, Google 'Power line Digital Subscriber Line (PDSL)'. It may enlighten you.

"if it DID have a transmitter, it would have to have an assigned frequency, and there would have to be a receiver to receive that frequency"
What do you think enables Movies On Demand? Your television has a very specific address which enables SINGLING YOU OUT digitally. There is NO interference with anyone else's programming. No need for a van.

My grip is pretty firm. I believe my own eyes and ears before corporate propaganda. You should do some research.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 06/13/2009
- Orphie I'm a Fan of Orphie 6 fans permalink

That's very interesting. Now, excuse me, Dwayne, I'm due back on planet earth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 06/13/2009
- dzent1 I'm a Fan of dzent1 82 fans permalink
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You, Orphie, are what is meant when corporations talk about the "good consumer".

What a thing to aspire to...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:10 PM on 06/13/2009
- tisfilm I'm a Fan of tisfilm 31 fans permalink
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move on, We are in digital world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 06/13/2009

It's not like they didn't warn people it was going to happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 06/13/2009

Yet if you were to go into any store that sells tvs the workers there didn't know a damn thing about the transition. A lot of people with cable or satelite tv were still told they needed to buy converter boxes or weren't told to buy a new tv with a compatible antenna.

Also tv makers removed the antenna from the tvs they made for years so a lot of people have found out they need to buy one which costs sixty bucks and sometimes they have to buy two or three.

Sorry but a lot of people had no frigging clue, it was never talked about and the tv industry made no effort to educate consumers nor retailers on the switch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:07 PM on 06/13/2009
- swlewis57 I'm a Fan of swlewis57 7 fans permalink

As for the retailer not being informed, that is called "training and education" for the sales staff, and not the TV industry's fault.

The TV industry has ran crawls for a while now, there have been soft tests with call-in centers for consumers, I personally have gone out in public to talk to groups about the transition as a part of DTVSpeaks, and I am part of the FCC funded program for free in- home troubleshooting visits.

I could go on, but you get the picture. I am sorry, but it has been talked about and the TV industry has made many, many efforts to get the word out and help educate people about the DTV transition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 PM on 06/14/2009
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