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Ways to get HDTV Which provider offers better high-def programming options: cable or satellite?
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Cable
There's an excellent chance you can get HDTV signals through your current cable provider. According to the NCTA, as of March 2007 more than 100 million U.S. households were "passed" by a cable operator that offers HDTV, and all of the top 100 cable markets in the country were "passed" by a cable company with HDTV programming. That's the good news. The bad news is that most providers carry only a handful of the 50-odd HDTV networks. Equipment
ProgrammingIn addition to the four major broadcast networks mentioned above, cable HD services almost always include the HD versions of PBS, MyTV, and regional sports networks in their basic packages. Numerous pay-TV networks, usually available for an extra charge, have also jumped on the HDTV bandwagon. HBO and Showtime subscribers can watch favorites such as Entourage, Big Love, In Treatment, Weeds, and Dexter in high-definition. (On the other hand Sex in the City, The Wire, and Curb Your Enthusiasm fans are still stuck with standard-definition versions of their favorites.)Many other cable- and satellite-only networks boast HD programming, including ESPN and ESPN2 (SportsCenter, selected games from MLB, the NFL, NBA, and college sports), NBC's Universal HD (Battlestar Galactica, Monk, and Law & Order: SVU, Medical Investigation), the all-HD Discovery HD Theater (Sunrise Earth, American Chopper) Mark Cuban's all-HD channels HDNet (Dan Rather Reports, Nothing But Trailers) and HDNet Movies, TNT HD (The Closer, Hunted, Law & Order, ER, Alias, and selected NBA games) and TBS HD (MLB play-offs, reruns, Tyler Perry's House of Payne). However, coverage is still spotty. Just because your cable provider offers the standard version of these stations doesn't mean you'll get the HDTV versions by default, and in general DirecTV and Dish Network offer a larger selection of HD networks. Regional Sports NetworksOne of cable's big advantages over satellite is the inclusion of high-definition Regional Sports Networks. These are channels, often owned by cable companies, that broadcast the live games of individual sports teams in a particular region. Examples include Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia, which has rights to Phillies, 76ers, and Flyers games; Fox Sports Net West, with rights to Clippers, Lakers, Dodgers, Angels, Kings, and Ducks games (among others); and YES, with rights to Yankees and Nets games. Most cable providers include the high-definition version of the local RSN, if available, in their basic HD packages, but RSN coverage on satellite is still spotty. YES HD is not available on Dish Network, for example, pretty much excluding it from consideration by hardcore Yankees fans with HDTVs. Both Dish and DirecTV are working to expand offerings of high-definition RSNs, but for now local cable services typically offer more of those channels than satellite.CableCard
The most-popular alternative to cable company boxes is the excellent TiVo HD. It uses two cable cards (or one special "dual-stream" card) to receive and record just about any cable company's digital and HDTV programming. Its users don't need to rent the company's box, but will pay to buy the TiVo box and of course TiVo's own monthly fees, which are higher than what most cable companies charge. Still, the benefits of the TiVo interface and additional features are worth it for some people. Similar CableCard-compatible products are available, including adapters for Media Center PCs, and many more should hit the market in the next few years. Competing against the cable companies' hardware is pretty difficult, and we expect most such products to be as expensive, or more-so, than TiVo HD--at least in the near future. |
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