Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Mandatory Digital TV
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What will the TV authorities do about viewers in bad-signal areas when the time comes for the change-over? My block of flats has a communal satellite aerial. To subscribe to it I would have to pay over �100 installation fee, and a monthly rental therafter, or have a Sky monthly rental package - which I don't really want. I had an engineer come here with a sample set-top box but as predicted it was too weak a signal. What is disappointing is seeing some trailed BBC programmes on their new channels, ones I should like to see. Is it legal what they are doing? I thought that all licence payers should be equal, be able to see the Corporation's output? I wrote to the Radio Times but, natch, it was not published. What do other ABers with technical knowledge think, please?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Loosehead: Thanks. I wonder why the TV engineer didn't mention that. I take it that it would be an internal booster. I won't be able (terms of lease on flat) to have my own exterior booster. I am close to the electrified tracks of the overground part of the tube and in between hills, so I guess I'm never going to be lucky. After I posted a friend sent me a cutting from the Guardian (Philip Inman 30th April on the subject of set-top boxes and aerials). Maybe you have seen the website links but the article gives
dtg.org.uk/consumer/coverage.html and cai.org.uk
or culture.gov.uk