Now that we've
broke it down and explained exactly what you need to do to get prepared for the
US analog shutoff, we're curious to see just how many of you will actually be taking the government up on its offer and snagging one or two $40 vouchers. We fully expect the vast majority of you to have no need for one in your main living area, but what about that hand-me-down set you keep in the kids' room / garage to catch Sunday afternoon sporting events while tinkering around? Bottom line: will you be picking up a converter, and if so, what will you be using it for?
If these things can accept a coax input and output over composite that would be perfect for my projector, which currently gets its TV through my PC. I might also be able to use it to play Atari games on my projector. Other than that, I might need one or two for my TV Tuners in my PC, since they don't support QAM and I don't know if that's going to be the digital cable standard or what.
You never know when one might come in handy. I have an old RCA handheld that won't work without it and if I have a voucher, why not.
No TV = no need for converter box ;)
I'm just waiting for the vouchers and a few more options to hit the market. I have cable on the main set, but don't feel like running it to the rest of the rooms in the house. Besides, with a decent antenna I should be able to pick up some channels from Toronto and Rochester that the cable company doesn't carry.
I think the industry has a problem. Maybe they want it to happen for profit.
I was in Best Buy today and saw someone picking up a converter box while I was looking at TV's. She asked me if this was the box that she needed to buy to keep her TV working. I asked her if she got her TV with an antenna. She said "no I have cable". I then asked if she had a cable box, she said yes. I told her that she didn't need a converter box and the cable company will give her a new digital box if she still has an old one. She told me that her friend told her that her TV wouldn't work if she didn't get the new box.
I'm afraid a lot of people are probably going to think the same thing.
ill olny need one for my kids room. all other ones have DirecTV
i just got my two boxes
When there is a retail source for the EchoStar/SlingMedia TR-40 I will apply for two coupons for our household. I will probably buy four of 'em, and a couple of the TR-50 gadgets, too.
Sometime you poll for the reasons we don't subscribe to cable or satellite. For myself, the $40/month the cable company wanted in '85 was too much, the satellite companies were still using 12-foot diameter dishes on concrete pads, and in my location I get about 22 stations ota. So I just never built the cost of cable or satellite into the household economy.
And here's the kicker: when I called the local cable company in '85 the customer service rep did not tell me about their "super basic" subscription for only $12/month! I found out about that just a couple years ago. If they had told me about it back then I probably would have been hooked!
planning on getting one for the bedroom tv in case i move and ahve to wait 3 weeks to get cable or satellite hooked up
yea, il need one. OTA is way cheaper than anything else =) lol
Re: Poll about getting a converter box.....Grandma HAS cable; we do not! We'll be getting them.
I got my converter box on the internet at www.compupartsandmore.com for $21.99 + the govt coupon with free shipping. It was easy to set, and I get more channels with a better picture quality that before. I am using the same old antenna, so a new digital antenna is not necessary. In the analog mode I get one channel. Using the converter some stations have 3 or more sub channels. $21.99 is a small price to pay for improved tv reception.