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...date of what people are calling the great digital switchover--or sometimes, kind of poetically, the "analog sunset." On that date, all full-power TV stations will be required to stop broadcasting analog TV signals and transmit only digital ones. Most people won't be affected: you can pick up digital TV using a regular old antenna--you just need to make sure your TV has a digital tuner in it, which all new and newish TVs have. After March 1, 2007, manufacturers were pretty much required to put a digital tuner in every TV they made. If you have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Requiem for Rabbit Ears | 1/21/2009 | See Source »

...have an analog-only TV, you'll need to get a set-top digital-to-analog converter box in order to keep receiving your episodes of Gary Unmarried. It costs about $50. The government feels bad about making you do this, so it is distributing $40 coupons to help bankroll your upgrade. Call it the analog bailout...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Requiem for Rabbit Ears | 1/21/2009 | See Source »

...transition hasn't been exactly silky-smooth. The FCC has been blanketing the media with warnings, but there are still about 8 million steadfastly analog households out there, according to Nielsen, and the government has already run through the entire $1.34 billion it had set aside for those converter-box coupons. (There's a limit of two per household, and they expire 90 days after they're issued.) The situation is bad enough that it has actually become a presidential transition issue: on Jan. 8, John Podesta, Obama's transition-team co-chair, sent a letter to Congress asking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Requiem for Rabbit Ears | 1/21/2009 | See Source »

...doing this? Oh, about a zillion reasons. Digital TV makes possible better sound and a sharper picture as well as something called multicasting, which means that--because digital signals are more compact than analog ones--single stations will be able to broadcast multiple channels of programming all at once. The switchover will also free up a lot of space on the overcrowded airwaves. Some of it will be used for an improved post--Sept. 11, post-Katrina emergency-broadcast system (yes, even better than those color bars and that weirdly aggravating tone). The rest of it went to the highest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Requiem for Rabbit Ears | 1/21/2009 | See Source »

Fairly or unfairly, neatly or messily, sooner or later the switchover will happen. And when it does, we should take a moment to salute the passing of the analog era. Just as vinyl records gave rise to scratching and skipping, analog TV created a whole gallery of hallucinatory special effects: ghosting, snow, psychedelic colors, vertical hold. We hated them at the time, but we may yet come to miss them. Digital signals are more robust than analog--they're less prone to distortion, and when they break up, they do it in tidy little squares, which aren't nearly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Requiem for Rabbit Ears | 1/21/2009 | See Source »

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