Broadcasters Oppose Wireless Net Service 146
kaufmanmoore writes "The AP reports that the National Association of Broadcasters is launching ads to target lawmakers over a push by a consortium of technology companies including Google, Intel, HP, and MSFT who want to use unused and unlicensed TV spectrum (the so-called 'white space') for wireless broadband. Broadcasters are airing concerns about the devices creating interference with broadcast television. In a statement, NAB chairman Alan Frank takes a swipe at technology companies: 'While our friends at Intel, Google and Microsoft may find system errors, computer glitches and dropped calls tolerable, broadcasters do not.'"
If broadcasts are so critical, how come.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Then the SuperBowl comes along and everything turns glitchy.
How come broadcasters who think they are the end-all and be-all of reliability can't get this most important of games broadcast without problems?
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Re:If broadcasts are so critical, how come.... (Score:4, Insightful)
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It was a perfect picture during the normal plays. It was TERRIBLE (worse than old-style broadcasting) during touchdowns.
The only thing I can figure is that crowd reaction of the broadcaster (i.e. the *employees* of ESPN or the local affiliate) during the touchdowns was the pr
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A problem with the lossy compression, perhaps? It's easy to provide a good picture when there's not much going on - it's harder to be consistent when movement (on and across the field, in the stands in the background, etc.) peaks...
It could also be that your reception is marginally bad - to the point that your set is receiving enough information during those low-bandwidth moments that it can pick out a reasonable amount of data - but when the data requirements for the signal go up, redund
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That's why it's called football.
There's a north american country where people, for some unknown reason, refer to rugby as "football".
Weird, I know.
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<br>The moral of this tale is to use <sarcasm> tags.
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I've always wondered why, what with horses going out of fashion, no-one plays moto-polo. That would be awesome.
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There's a north american country where people, for some unknown reason, refer to rugby as "football".
Weird, I know.
Granted the new name doesn't make much sense either.
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If you read the wikipedia article, they mention another possible reason for it being called football (instead of, say, carryball).
Sounds like Bull to me (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sounds like Bull to me (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Sounds like Bull to me (Score:4, Interesting)
This is besides the fact that the FCC rules for this spectrum use dictate that stations must detect DTV and notch their TX out of any DTV in the air.
They Are Telling The Truth (Score:5, Funny)
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It is bull, here is why: (Score:5, Interesting)
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I can receive hidef tv anytime i want. it costs me nothing. it also has a large range. packet network on the other hand are much more expensive to setup then a simple transmitter, and require specialised equipment to communicate with. there is no hd content streamed yet either, not enough bandwidth. broadcast tv is actually very very efficent, and in terms of sending a picture and sound, pisses all over tcp for speed.
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How's your upload speed on that connection? Do you just sit there mindlessly and absorb your non-interactive programming from the network Gods? Internets are expensive because they carry interactive content, not just one-way broadcasts that spray a signal to anyone with a receiver. Broadcasting is very important in an emergency situation or in the case of a coach potato watching the la
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It's sort of like you've just heard that Union Carbide is applying for a zoning variance to manufacture explosives next door to your house. They claim that the building wi
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False (this is in the United States and Canada - not sure how it works elsewhere). Unused TV channels are used for low-power local broadcast equipment such as wireless microphones and in-ear monitors (the ear plugs with wires that you see musicians wearing). You may see some total crap wireless mic from Radio Shack that runs in the 900MHz band, but all the good ones (ie, from Shure, Sennheiser, AKG, etc...) run in unused TV channels
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Thanks for pointing that out. I forgot about it because I knew that unlike AM and FM, you can't run even a flea power TV signal in the US without a license that makes sure you are not on an interfering frequency.
Turns out that wireless microphones and such are actually a licensed service, although hardly anyone bothers to license them. Because they operate at such low power -- 50-100mw (250mw max) -- and are sensitive to interference, themselves, their users apparently take care of keeping them out of t
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Maybe I'm wrong, but I think not. Here's an article http://www.newsfactor.com/story.xhtml?story_id=003000AMBS9L [newsfactor.com]
digital tv (Score:2)
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58% of the time, the devices would wrongly assume a channel was free for use w
thats funny (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe because it did in the tests (Score:5, Informative)
Then those companies said, basically, "yeah, well, you should ignore that 'cause the device was just deffective." Well, then show me the model which isn't. Also, did they test it? If they can't take a demo to the FCC seriously enough to have a fully tested prototype, it doesn't exactly inspire confidence... yet.
Also show me that you've fixed that mode of failure. If a device can just fail in a mode that jams two adjacent TV channels, I'd worry too.
To give an example from another wave band and type, imagine that a disco opens across the road from your house. Yes, it can be soundproofed to hell and back, but I'd like them to do that first, not just remain at the "it could be done" stage. If the first test could be heard from a mile, dunno about you, I'd probably be at the head of the medieval mob with torches and pitchforks trying to get them out of town.
And, honestly, the computer-related companies _do_ have a track record of pushing unsafe or untested stuff out the door. Tell anyone who's seen a Windows computer get pwned in 10 minutes flat after connecting to the internet that they should _totally_ trust MS to have their broadcasting equipment fail-safe.
Google is any better only because they stuck to the "but it's only a beta!" defense for how many years now? In any other tech company, going productive with a beta would be called irresponsible. My boss would probably have my head for lunch if I told him "it's just a beta" about a version that got deployed.
At any rate, it's again a culture that doesn't inspire confidence when it comes to other domains. If they can run their search engine as a beta and tweak it as it goes, more power to them, but it's not a model I'd want in something that broadcasts stuff. Or generally in anything that involves a physical product. If their page rank algorithm fails it's just a "teh oops" moment, and they'll tweak it some more again. If such a broadcasting device fails, it jams two adjacent TV stations. It's just not the same thing.
Heck, even in software it becomes an unworkable model if you move out of the free-services-over-the-net arena. If you shipped an OS by the "it's just a beta" philosophy, you'd probably do worse than even MS. Remember, MS at least has the policy of never shipping with known bugs. But even just the unknown ones caused the pwnage-fest when connected to the Internet. Now imagine it shipped as a beta.
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Do they? When was this introduced, and do you have a reference? I remember Windows 2000 (?) shipping with some high-number-of-thousands bugs, just wondering when they changed and how they define this, assuming you're right.)
Eivind.
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But if you do that, they might demand more for your out-of-court settlement; after all, you rec
Hrumph (Score:3, Insightful)
TV quality (Score:5, Interesting)
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You mean like all the "breaking news" that we get every night. I remember when breaking news was that the nuclear reactor next door had just melted down. Now the term is applied to news stories that happened yesterday. Can anyone say KIRO?
Re:TV quality (Score:5, Interesting)
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*If only my desktop could handle mythtv's recording and playback simultaneously...
Re:TV quality (Score:4, Insightful)
The Web makes up for it in volume (Score:2)
Perhaps it's because I don't watch sports (I can't stand ESPN-culture), but there are MAYBE five or six television programs that I ever find myself watching. In fact, if it weren't for DVR, I don't thing I would ever turn my TV on unless it was to play a video game. In fact, I went about six months last year without cable. Compare that to my internet habits. I check Google News, Digg, and Slashdot daily and I have 19 podcasts, which I avidly keep up with.
If you can't find interesting, updated content o
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We should wish for internet over radio, pray even! Forget all these lame broadcasters and their one-way commun
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Oh Yea?? (Score:4, Interesting)
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What? They've started using that whitespace already? Those bastards!!!
If we let Google start using vacant area's of radio frequency then it's just going to get worse!
Not to mentions... (Score:2)
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With the high cost of donuts these days, this phrase doesn't mean as much as it used to. How long before we're saying "I would bet doughnuts to dollars..."
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We are experiencing technical difficulties... (Score:1)
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mininova [mininova.org] to the rescue.
I hope you don't take this the wrong way, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd prefer more bandwidth over more TV any day. Many (if not most) of us have cable or satellite now anyway, so you're being marginalized whether you like it or not. Don't pretend that our attempts to distribute more bandwidth to home are what causes your falling profits and "glitches". Wake up - the world is digital, and it's on-demand.
Those were the days... (Score:5, Funny)
"Right, Alan - this is the newest thing. Now we can pull in another 4 channels, and one of them is supposed to be showing at least an hour of VibraColor every Friday!"
"While our neighbors may find it easy to put up with ghosting, rolling images and static..." Mr. Frank said to Alan, "...the Franks do not. One day, Son, everyone will enjoy color TV the way it was meant to be. Why, I bet they'll have at least twenty channels fifty years from now. Imagine!"
"And since you're sitting right in front of it, flip the channel to six, Alan...careful - clockwise! Boxing starts in ten minutes! Marge - is that cake ready, yet? All this work & I'm still hungry!."
File under "oligopoly" (Score:2)
1) This will give the various companies straight bandwidth to use for pushing their own video content, which has better supported advertising due to targeted ads (you can actually track who sees the ads, and target ads based on content).
2) The various companies listed might put out devices that would act like a rabbit ears for the internet- cable "websites" beamed directly to a box piped to a user's television, only on
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huh, I already get that, it's called "Bravo" at least I think it's the same show, everytime I turn it on it's just a bunch of not-so-bright kids in a hot tub making a weird beeping noise instead of talking.
Broadcast TV is dead (Score:3, Informative)
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Going all digital does not mean getting rid of broadcast. In our scattered population it is quite common to only have antenna on the roof and no cable. The digital signal travels through the air just fine. You just need different kind of decoder for aerial and cable thou. (For reasons I am yet to understand. You actually need yet another type for satellite dish...)
I perhaps should mention that we also ha
This just in... (Score:4, Interesting)
Cable companies also oppose municipal fiber internet.
Cry me a river. You had your chance to help. Now get out of the way.
Who even pays for broadcast TV lobbyists? (Score:1)
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Alan Frank, You Have Nothing. (Score:3, Insightful)
Broadcast Glitch? There have been plenty but the next one can be permanent for all I care. Broadcast and all push media is a waste of spectrum, unable to deliver what users actually want like pull media can.
As a side note, someone who does not know the difference between M$ and Google reliability has to be a M$ user.
Re:Alan Frank, You Have Nothing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, "pull" would be completely impractical for TV and radio broadcasts over-the-air - how would the TV request a particular channel? It would need a way to contact the broadcaster and request a channel - meaning it would need a powerful, expensive transmitter.
I'll tell you what's a waste of spectrum though: analog TV and radio. Digital transmissions use up a lot less spectrum. At least, in the USA, analog broadcast TV is going away - but I figure AM and FM are here to stay; the installed device base is enormous.
How Push is a Waste. (Score:3, Interesting)
a broadcast TV station that can reach a half a million homes, with a few thousand TVs tuned in at any given time. How could "pull" save any spectrum?
Because half a million people don't want to watch 99% of what's broadcast, broadcast is 99% waste. People put up with "I Love Lucy" when there was nothing else. Pull gives people the power to watch what they want, when they want so it can be 100% efficient.
"pull" would be completely impractical for TV and radio broadcasts over-the-air - how would the T
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what do you have against "I Love Lucy?"
Reference Crocodile Dundee looking at a TV, "I've seen one of those once." TV is playing "I Love Lucy". CD, "Yep, that's what I saw." There's nothing intrinsically wrong with I Love Lucy, it's just that the first syndicated and most played TV show in existence has surely been broadcast more often than people actually wanted to see it.
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MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
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Running for President (Score:4, Funny)
My main thrust is lobbiests, they need to go away. The only
lobbies that should exist are those that we all may find ourselves
in, like the lobby for the aged or for the infirm(handicapped).
All the rest need to be outlawed. Period.
I would re-instate the original FCC charter with minor mods to
take into account the technilogical changes that have happened
since the 1900's. I would make the field level for all, and discount
monied interests nearly 100 percent.
Vote for Zoomshorts !!!
Plus I have some really cool fachist(sp) leanings too.
When politicials are talking, they are lying. I lie daily!
You all should feel right at home.
Why does The Simpsons immediately come to mind? (Score:2)
Actually my Internet is far more reliable than my local broadcast stations.
Receiver Quality (Score:2)
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It's not just broadcasters against the wireless net service. If I read the fine article correctly, cable and satellite providers are also against this idea. Their theory is that an inadequately shielded TV or VCR plugged directly into the cable would still catch this dreaded interference to TV pictures from the new type of equipment.
They recommend more research--and I don't think they mean into TV shielding. [shrug]
yeah right (Score:1)
Gimme a break...
Huh? (Score:2)
People in the US still watch over-the-air broadcast television?
Where I live, in a large town, but not in a huge city with signal-obstructing buildings, broadcast TV is unwatchable. And basic cable (local channels + CNN and a handful of other cable channels) is like $8/month.
Not where I live ... (Score:2)
I agree with you on the unwatchable part, but where I live basic cable is some $30/month.
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I doubt it. Cable providers have to have a tier with just the broadcast channels for a reasonable price, Time Warner calls it lifeline serve and it costs an average of ~$11/month and then there is standard service which is ~70 channels at ~$54/month.
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I lived in Boston next to Mass. General Hospital (The Emerson Place) and i got PBS(which was interesting) and some 5 other channels.
Of course i did get to watch Noddy and the stupid dinosaur a lot, but hey the channels were free and it kinda was relaxing.
Oh and i also watched the Annual Presidential Address to the congress. It was awesome !
There are some good news (no political coloring of any kind), good local news, events like the Boston Blues, etc.
For a month i delayed cable, and then ultimately su
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NAB is full of idiots... (Score:1, Insightful)
I find that statement by these old curmudgeons and stalwarts offensive and I don't work for any of these companies.
I do however have cable internet and digital cable television (Comcast) and it is extremely glitchy, both the internet service and the TV. The TV service momentarily blinks out and pixelates about 10 times per day on average and sometimes worse. Quite
Only poor people and Democrats ... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Of course this will go through.
This is not about signals, it's about viewers (Score:4, Insightful)
Broadcasters can whine about this and try to convince lawmakers (most of whom are tech-dumb lawyers) that this is all about protecting the radio frequency spectrum, but this is BUNK, Just as the FCC claims its regulation of computers is about protecting the spectrum is also BUNK.
If the FCC was REALLY about protecting the spectrum, then they would require some of the worst RF noise emitters (electric razors, light dimmers, lawnmowers, etc.) to be certified. There is a lot of money and prestige in regulating computer technology and none in regulating cheap low-tech devices. As long as they regulate important whizz-bang things like TV, radio, and computers, congress sees reasons to fund them at current levels. If they were the regulators of razors and light dimmers they might have less respect and lower budgets.
Similarly, the broadcasters are not worried about the spectrum (which sounds important and high-tech); This is about trying to keep from losing even more viewers (and the associated ad and/or subscriber revenue). Everybody knows that younger people are getting more of their entertainment from interactive web-based sources (news from the web, online games, etc) and this trend will likely SKYROCKET if low-cost high-speed net access becomes too available. Any roadblock they can throw-up will help hold back the tidal wave of losses.
Watch-out whenever somebody tells you that he, like some knight in shiny armor, is a defender-of-the-spectrum, (defender of the faith... protector of the realm... ) and all that stands between you and electromagnetic chaos. If he has a financial interest in the outcome then he probably is in it for the cash.
I love the way you put that... (Score:2)
I love getting lumped in with "younger people" like that. Makes me feel like a kid again.
This is so old ... (Score:4, Insightful)
2. TV studios oppose {anything new].
3. RIAA opposes [anything new].
4. Music studios oppose [anything new].
5. MPAA opposes [anything new].
6. Movie studios oppose [anything new].
7. FCC [still hasn't got a clue]
Nothing new under the Sun, I guess.
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Offhand I can't think of any examples of that, though.
Dropped calls (Score:1)
I'd hate it if broadcast television started dropping calls. Hmmm.
It's the interference. Yeah, that's the ticket (Score:2)
Interference (Score:2)
The real 'interference' that high-speed wireless Internet represents is _competitive_ interference, as fewer people feel the need to sit and drool watching the ads on the 'boob tube', and more choose other means of entertainment.
Scrap broadcast entirely (Score:3, Insightful)
Think of it this way; how many hours of the content that is streamed out to the population actually gets watched, versus the number of hours pumped onto the airwaves, or into cable/fiber networks?
On Comcast, I get 20+ HD channels, 200+ regular channels, with the bandwidth of ONE regular (non-digital) channel allocated to my ENTIRE NODE for internet access (50-400 people, give or take).
If all those channels were allocated to data, with packet video streaming through the node, there would be much more room for everything.
It's the same with the airwaves.
Change _everything_ over to MPEG4, make everything packet based, and watch the available bandwidth skyrocket. It's not like the FCC isn't already forcing everyone to change their analog TVs to digital TVs. And it's not even gov't interference in the market; spectrum allocation is already done entirely by the government, and is currently monopolized by regional players.
Dissenting view - I agree with him (Score:5, Insightful)
Background: As an ex telecommunications engineer I know about reliability; as a radio ham I know about interference.
With that background, I am afraid it seems to me that he may have a good point that some industries tolerate failure (Vista bluescreens on me several times a month), while others do not - your (wired) phone, for instance, always works. A public telehpone switch or a TV transmitted do not need "reboots" - a reboot of a phone switch can take hours, so it is engineered to not need them.
So while there is a legitimate question about the validity of broadcasting TV, the fundamental point, that while it exists interference should not be tolerated, is valid. It took decades to get to reliable TV transmission, and that can all bre broken very quickly.
Bunny ears (Score:2)
BTW, my way of limiting TV viewing is to use bunny ears on an HDTV (analog signal, not digital). Fewer channels and you've really got to want to see a show to put up with warped high resolution static. But if Mr. Frank can pull in "Heroes" a bit better, I'd appreciate it.
Put out to pasture (Score:2)