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Home > Digital television


 Contents
Digital television (DTV) uses digital modulation and compression to broadcast video, audio and data signals to television sets.

1 Introduction

A major use of DTV can be to carry more channels on the same amount of bandwidth. Another can be high-definition programming. The digital signal eliminates common artifacts from analog broadcasting, such as ghostly and snowy images, static noises in audio; although it can replace them with new MPEG compression artifacts, such as "blocking" artifacts, when transmitted with too low data rate, and may entirely fail to work in situations where analog television would have produced an impaired but watchable picture. Depending on the sophistication of the error correction, DTV may either work perfectly or not work at all.

The switch-over to DTV systems often coincides with a change in picture format from a aspect ratio of 4:3 to an aspect ration of 16:9. This enables TV to get closer to the aspect ratio of movies and human vision. On traditional screens this causes "letterbox" black stripes to be present in the picture in the attempt to place a 16:9 picture in a 4:3 frame. The previous aspect ratio of 4:3 was chosen due to the Academy standard ratio of the day.

2 Market

2.1 Terrestrial

Digital terrestrial television (DTTV) is in the process of deployment in a number of countries.

Terrestrial DTV is widely seen as an example of a technology that is being pushed on a public that does not exhibit much demand for it. This is particularly so for high definition ( HDTV) broadcast, where HDTV sets are at the moment prohibitively expensive, and very little HDTV content exists apart from movies.

2.2 Satellite

DTV has been shown to be commercially viable in the satellite television market, where it is used to multiplex large numbers of channels onto the available bandwidth. The business model for satellite DTV in the US and the UK is similar to that for cable TV. Satellite DTV operators tend to act as packagers for large numbers of channels, including pay-TV. The greater RF bandwidth available to satellite operators allows them to out-compete terrestrial DTV operators on both number of channels and picture quality.

2.3 Cable

Where a cable set-top box was already required, cable DTV deployment makes little difference to the service seen by users, but allows operators to increase the carrying capacity of their networks with low marginal levels of investment.

2.4 Analog switch-off

In general, viewers who are happy with their existing analog TV systems tend not to adopt terrestrial DTV systems (so-called "digital refuseniks"). Many of those who want cable-TV-like services will either buy cable TV, where available, or satellite DTV.

Governments are responding to this with an attempt to force the issue by enforcing planned "switch-off" dates for analog television, but are encountering push-back from the public, as they fear that this will mean that they will need to replace every television they own, including portable TVs and bedroom TVs.

They are increasingly cheap, as demand becomes more common.



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