T-minus one year till the US analog shutoff: are you ready?
Surely you knew what today was, right? No? Fret not, as Engadget HD has taken the time to consolidate the plethora of 2009 analog shutoff information into one handy guide. Are you ready for the DTV transition that will be going down exactly one year from today? Find out right over here.



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
jbhitter24 @ Feb 17th 2008 2:08PM
when you really think about it, how many people who read a gadget blog on a regular basis are even affected by the switch? heck who even gets and over the air signal?
PeterF @ Feb 17th 2008 2:15PM
I get an over the air signal, and my old TVs are affected. Sure I have 2 HDTVs, but one of them is only an HDTV monitor and the old TVs aren't HD OR digital. All the shows I care about are on broadcast, so I don't need cable or satellite. I am affected.
mattwier @ Feb 17th 2008 5:27PM
Also, I guess the days of those portable TV's is over. It affects those folks.
sarah11918 @ Feb 20th 2008 6:51PM
Actually, we're trying to figure out exactly how this will affect our SlingPlayer set up, and which is currently only compatible with our analog cable. While it won't be the end of the world, it will be a waste if we need a whole new slingbox for this.
So yes, there are gadget people relying on analog!
JCA @ Feb 17th 2008 2:09PM
Man, the thing that will le suck for people in "signal difficult" areas is that they will either get the broadcast, or they won't. That is just the inherent nature of digital. At least with analog you could still see/hear a weak signal, albeit with a lot of snow. That was tolerable. Ever try watching an OTA digital broadcast that kept crapping out every 5 secs? Oh god....that is a craptastic right there.
caleb @ Feb 17th 2008 3:55PM
Really? I used to get weak signal from my Digital Cable, and it wasn't either "there" or "not there". I would start getting noise and artifacts before I would completely loose signal. Is this really have broadcast digital will behave? It seems unlikely, but I really don't know anything about it.
Libb @ Feb 17th 2008 2:18PM
Today is also my birthday! :)
I'll be able to celebrate the analog shutoff by buying my first (legal) drink next year!
Jamma @ Feb 17th 2008 2:37PM
Happy 20th Birthday
CUBSWILLWIN @ Feb 17th 2008 2:33PM
I don't wanna switch! I love my little analog and It really suits me. I really don't see much of a difference in my analog TV and my friends pioneer
AndrewNeo @ Feb 17th 2008 2:40PM
TV doesn't change. Input source does.
CUBSWILLWIN @ Feb 17th 2008 5:44PM
Well aren't I stupid.
kojo87 @ Feb 17th 2008 2:53PM
as long as my dorm room next year has some sort of TV input source im happy. and if we could really use my roommate's 32" HDTV that would be great.
Danny @ Feb 17th 2008 2:58PM
366 days in that circle? I thought a year was 365.
letstakeawalk @ Feb 17th 2008 3:04PM
Happy Leap Year! February 29, 2008 FTW!
Totalfixation @ Feb 17th 2008 3:07PM
so does it mean digital atsc will have better reception? because right now its pretty poor and i really hope the signal increases.
Ahmed Alzayani @ Feb 17th 2008 3:08PM
OMG you still have analog OTA, I am form the Middle East and we don’t have analog OTA since 8 years now. Satellite+ Internet FTW
Samuel A. Falvo II @ Feb 17th 2008 4:01PM
You forget: although the USA is the most technologically advanced country on the planet, our market offerings are (oddly enough) quite backwards compared to other countries. Japan is orders of magnitude more advanced in their product offerings than we are, for example.
On the one hand, this is clearly a pity. Much of our market-backwardness is due to unnecessary or inappropriate legislation (instead of legislating RESULTS, our laws tend to concentrate instead on specific TECHNOLOGIES). But, one must wonder how much BIGGER our landfills would be were we to have markets offering products as advanced (and which evolves as fast) as those in Japan?
jbhitter24 @ Feb 17th 2008 4:55PM
not to mention we're freaking huge. its a lot harder for us to do these nationwide programs than most smaller middle eastern or european countries.
zevdawg @ Feb 17th 2008 3:37PM
I wonder if this affects Canada at all? Seen a couple LCD panel tv's at the store on display with stickers on them (notifying about the DTV transition in 09', but that's been added by the factory not the store itself)... Canada smetimes takes a longer amount of time to transition to technology than the US does, so am just curious.
This won't affect me, I'll either be on cable or satellite then anyhow :)
TIMMAH! @ Feb 17th 2008 4:03PM
I'll wait until the 2nd Gen converter boxes come out. I'm sure they'll find some problem with the first Gen systems. Also, are we ever going to see them priced below $40 (or is everyone pretty much gonna fix their price at $49.99?)
Fyrewerx @ Feb 17th 2008 4:14PM
I'm ready --- in fact, I'm sitting here typing this on the Internet, while in a small window slightly off to the right side, I'm watching the Daytona 500 on "over-the-air" High Definition. Its Windows Media Center and Hauppauge PCI card, along with an RCA HD-type rabbit ear antenna. And because it has dual inputs, I can also record a cable channel with the PVR portion.
And, on top of it all, the DVI output of my video card connects perfectly with my 50" HDTV.
Fyrewerx @ Feb 17th 2008 4:19PM
.... I forgot to mention, there are almost 35 digital and high def channels receivable in my area. Yes, many of them are duplicates, but the point is, they are easily received in my particular area. As more local stations in locations around the U.S., folks will at least be able to watch TV on their PCs using an under $75 video adapter (PCI or USB) and a cheap rabbit ear antenna.
bamboo @ Feb 17th 2008 4:35PM
I work in a park about 20 mins. outside of Washington D.C. that also has housing for some of the staff. Cox quoted us a price like over $20 grand to run cable the 1/4 mile from the nearest neighborhood link, which the park would never consider spending. They actually just installed sat. for internet, which is extremely slow, and worst of all doesn't work in bad weather, which is when we need it the most to decide to close the park or not.
So for those wondering who still uses OTA, hard to believe, but right in the heart of a "superpower", I still have to watch snowy Simpson's on FOX, and that is if we can get the antenna just right.
bamboo @ Feb 17th 2008 4:38PM
accitently left out:
outside of Washington D.C. IN A PARK that also has housing for some of the staff.
Joseph Singer @ Feb 17th 2008 5:19PM
Interesting all this news about digital converters when you cannot even get one from the local Buy More ... er Best Buy.
Steffen Jobbs @ Feb 17th 2008 5:51PM
These people gotta be kidding. I've had TV and internet cable broadband for seven years or so. I probably won't even notice when they shut down the analog signal. I still have VHF and UHF antennas on my roof and they still work in emergencies, but I've never really needed them.
I feel badly about the people that can't get or afford digital dishes or DSL. Blame the government for not subsidizing this stuff for the masses. This is the US and we should have the best communications infrastructure in the world. Except we gotta spend so much building up other countries infrastructures as a goodwill gesture.
shiba @ Feb 17th 2008 9:17PM
I don't get why anyone is supposed to care, Everywhere I have ever lived had all the over the air channels being broadcast over some of the local cable channels (Between channels 1-25 or whatever it is), and its like 4 channels anyway. Even in NYC I could only pick up like 12, and half of them where cable channels in Spanish or some garbage. (Cable channels can be switched to Spanish so I really don't understand why this existed) If you haven't switched to cable or satellite yet, you need to get with the times. Over the air is dead...like for real now, but it has been for years. Cable is cheap as hell now, there really isn't any excuse. You can even get cable packages that are only the OTA channels/local channels for like 10 bucks. Although I don't know why you would care enough to do so. Theres pretty much nothing on them except the simpsons and that show is complete shit now and has been for years. Rent shows on DVD or something, far less annoying with the BS 6 minutes of commercials and 2 minutes of show blocks they use now. I don't even bother to do that, I just pirate everything, screw TV, TV sucks ass now. Theres like 5 good shows and then a bunch of bullshit Drama/Reality/American Gladiators on showtime/hbo/etc. that all you drooling idiots watch. (Not pointing fingers at anyone here, I'm just saying I've yet to watch one of these popular shows that wasn't an absolute shitfest) Would you really watch that if it wasn't the only thing on? You can't deny that 95% of TV nowadays is absolutely terrible unless you really will watch anything thats on.
spacegravity4me @ Feb 17th 2008 10:03PM
Um... actually, today is my 22nd birthday. Thanks Engadget. You forgot... again.
jmd @ Feb 17th 2008 11:51PM
I'm actually interested in one of these boxs. Not only do I not buy cable tv, but my tv's RF connection is broken, and so I dont get any OTA stuff since I got rid of the vcr. Not only do the boxs have component out, but better visual qualitys, and a functional guide system to boot. and it will be free. works for me!
SuperQ @ Feb 18th 2008 2:46AM
Yup, I took down the gargantuan VHF/UHF antenna off the house this weekend. I might put up a 2.4ghz wifi antenna for better back-yard surfing. :-)
OneLove @ Feb 18th 2008 11:29AM
I have four tuners in my vista media center, 2 analog, 2 digital. So I will loose 2 tuners, oh well. Maybe then I will buy a true HD plasma.