NEW YORK – Starting in the morning and going into the night, TV stations across the U.S. are cutting their analog signals Friday, ending a six-decade era for the technology and likely stranding more ...
TV as we've known it has barely a year left to live. On Feb. 17, 2009, the analog broadcasts that have taken the networks into American homes for decades will end, replaced by a stream of digital bits ...
NEW YORK (AP) -- Starting in the morning and going into the night, TV stations across the U.S. planned to cut their analog signals Friday, ending a six-decade era for the technology and likely ...
A video from New Year’s Eve in the year 2000 has gone viral after people reacted to the shocking price of a basic analog TV. The video, posted to @NostalgiaFolder on X (formerly known as Twitter), has ...
In theater superstition, a bad dress rehearsal is supposed to foretell a good opening night. If so, the U.S. might be in good shape when it turns off the last analog TV broadcasts in June, because the ...
In the late 1980s the television station I worked at was still using an early 1970s transmitter, an RCA TT-50FH (50 kW, Series F, High-band VHF). The transmitter was made with three cabinets: two 25 ...
All hail, all hail. Digital TV has arrived. Today is the day broadcasters nationwide shut off their analog TV signals and replace them with digital TV. Most of the nation has converted to some form of ...
As you probably know, analog TV broadcasts will cease on February 17, 2009—less than a year away. For many viewers, it will be a nonevent, simply because they don’t depend on over-the-air broadcasts ...
The CW in the Twin Cities and Lakeland Public Television in the Bemidji-Brainerd area were among several Minnesota TV stations that ended their analog broadcasts Tuesday, nearly four months in advance ...
Here’s another quick update about what our government is doing about the looming deadline for analog TV. Looks like the The House Energy and Commerce Committee has now decided that the switch to ...
When the Beatles made their U.S. television debut on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, 73 million people tuned in. According to the Nielsen Co., the number of U.S. households today that rely solely on ...