Comments on: FAQ: CableCard? What's that?
The FCC wants to terminate your cable set-top box. Here's what you need to know. ![]()
Photos: Free your set-top box
The FCC wants to terminate your cable set-top box. Here's what you need to know. ![]()
Photos: Free your set-top box
December 30, 2009 5:38 PM PST
December 30, 2009 4:57 PM PST
December 30, 2009 4:14 PM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
If the goverment is so hot and heavy to get this spectrum then why should the consumers have to foot the bill for all of this new hardware. The goverment should be telling the makers that you have to see the hardware for no more than $100 a pop with the goverment picking part of the difference and the the stations picking up the rest. I mean really the stations makes tons of money of the commercials they cram down our throats and then they turn around and keep charging the cable and sat. providers more and more for the stations.
Why is it the consumers that are always getting the shaft with this kind of thing. As for these cards why does your Tivo need one when Tivo stopped making their devices with sat. and cable receivers in them. If it costs you $50 to buy a card or $2 a month to rent and you have to have one for each TV, each Tivo, Each DVD video recorder, etc. etc. I don't see how that is cheaper for the consumer buying them or renting them. And, it looks like at least for now you still have to have the set-top box if you want the on-screen guide and pay-per-view so you get hit with another monthly fee.
Plus well all know damn good and well that greedy companies like Comcast aren't going to pass any saving on to us and they will probably charge just as much for a card as they do a box. Seems to me this is all another shafting just like HDTV.
Robert
I'm actually surprised that recording devices will be able to use the CableCard.
What's going to happen is that the cable companies will require a CC for each device capable of recieving their signal, and likely still charge most customers for a box anyway, whether it be a cable DVR or STB for an older set.
So TV's containing the more advanced tuners are more expensive to build.
DVR set top boxes and pay-per-view are also good reasons not go take the carblecard TV plunge.
A cablecard TiVo on the other hand.. :)
In other words, after years of trying, and failing, to legally-overturn the Supreme Court's "Beta-Max decision" (which established many of the basic-rights held by consumers for the last twenty-years), a few powerful-interests are quite obviously attempting to mis-use the FCC's-authority to finally accomplish their ultimate goal of eliminating any pretense of consumer- 'rights', choice', or 'control'.
Consumer control is slipping away. This is most evident with computers as they are the ultimate digital devices to date.
All this will happen under the guise of "looking" better with "more" security and "higher" security.
Consumer control is slipping away. This is most evident with computers as they are the ultimate digital devices to date.
All this will happen under the guise of "looking" better with "more" functionality and "higher" security.
So far this can't be done with digital cable because the channels still must be selected at the box.
My question: will future D-VHS (if VHS survives), DVRs and DVD recorders be compatible with CableCard?
One can hope.
Want something useful? Ask your cable supplier why VCRs have had channel-switch timers for over twenty years but cable boxes (unless you add the cable companies' integrated TiVo or whatever) don't. Or when can we use picture-in-picture (another costly but useless-with-cable feature) or watch-A-while-record-B multichannel?
Thanks
- CableCard
- by billsen February 7, 2007 9:28 AM PST
- Is anyone aware of conflict concerning MOTOROLA
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(23 Comments)CableCard and LG LCD TV?
billsen