Thursday, February 5, 2009
DELAYED~UNTIL~JUNE~12TH
The House passed the DTV delay bill this Wednesday, delaying THE END OF TELEVISION until June 12th, 2009. The video program will be broadcast on that day, the final day of analog television signal. We are now extending the submission deadline until May 20th. THE END will only be bigger and better than ever with further to fall and more to lose, so continue to submit video and await the date. For questions concerning submitted material or submissions please contact ian(~dot~)f(~dot~)page(~at~)gmail(~dot~)com
~Stay~Tuned~
Sunday, February 1, 2009
STILL ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS
Due to the confusion that this Congressional delay is causing, we are going to continue to accept submissions up to the last minute. If it gets here before Feb. 17th, it will go on the air. Should the delay pass the House, we will plan on broadcasting the program on June 12th. Either way, get your submissions in!
Chairman: FCC has no coherent plan for digital DTV
The U.S. will have significant problems switching from analog to digital television if the transition goes forward as scheduled on Feb. 17, the recently appointed acting chairman of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission said Friday.
The FCC has had no "coherent and coordinated plan" to transition the nation from analog to digital television during the past two years, Michael Copps said during a speech before the FCC Consumer Advisory Committee. Copps, a Democrat appointed acting chairman last week by President Barack Obama, ripped into digital-television transition efforts under his predecessor, Republican Kevin Martin.
"At this point, we will not have -- we cannot have -- a seamless DTV transition," Copps said. "There is no way to do in the 26 days new leadership has had here what we should have been laser-focused on for 26 months. That time is lost -- and it's lost at a cost. There is consumer disruption down the road we've been on. We need to realize this."
Copps said he's focusing on minimizing and repairing problems with the DTV transition. The transition is necessary after Congress, in late 2005, passed legislation requiring U.S. TV stations to move to all-digital broadcasts and abandon analog spectrum between channels 52 and 69. Much of the cleared spectrum, in the 700MHz band, was sold in auctions that ended in March 2007, and many spectrum experts say the spectrum is optimal for wireless broadband services.
However, Robert Gibbs, spokesman for Obama, said he expects Congress will delay the DTV transition until June 12. The Senate has voted to delay the transition, but the House of Representatives on Wednesday wasn't able to get the two-thirds of the votes it needed to suspend House rules and rush a delay vote through. But the delay did receive 90 more votes for it than against it in the House, and Gibbs predicted the House would take up delay legislation next week under regular rules, with only a majority vote required.
"We never really dug deep enough to understand all the consequences that would attend the DTV transition -- not just the intended good results, but all the unintended consequences, too, the ones that usually cause the big problems," he said. "It's because we didn't have a well-thought-out and coherent and coordinated plan to ease the transition -- a plan to combine the resources we needed to avoid disruption."
There's been a "patchwork of disjointed efforts" to address the DTV transition, Copps added. "We didn't have a sense of real urgency until it was too late," he said.
The FCC is taking several steps on the assumption that the DTV transition will happen Feb. 17, Copps said. The agency is focusing on consumer outreach, including field operations and its Web site, to inform people about the transition, he said.
The agency is also working to figure out which consumers will be most at risk of losing all TV reception, and it is "coordinating nonstop" with the NTIA and private groups on education efforts, he said.
The FCC has had no "coherent and coordinated plan" to transition the nation from analog to digital television during the past two years, Michael Copps said during a speech before the FCC Consumer Advisory Committee. Copps, a Democrat appointed acting chairman last week by President Barack Obama, ripped into digital-television transition efforts under his predecessor, Republican Kevin Martin.
"At this point, we will not have -- we cannot have -- a seamless DTV transition," Copps said. "There is no way to do in the 26 days new leadership has had here what we should have been laser-focused on for 26 months. That time is lost -- and it's lost at a cost. There is consumer disruption down the road we've been on. We need to realize this."
Copps said he's focusing on minimizing and repairing problems with the DTV transition. The transition is necessary after Congress, in late 2005, passed legislation requiring U.S. TV stations to move to all-digital broadcasts and abandon analog spectrum between channels 52 and 69. Much of the cleared spectrum, in the 700MHz band, was sold in auctions that ended in March 2007, and many spectrum experts say the spectrum is optimal for wireless broadband services.
However, Robert Gibbs, spokesman for Obama, said he expects Congress will delay the DTV transition until June 12. The Senate has voted to delay the transition, but the House of Representatives on Wednesday wasn't able to get the two-thirds of the votes it needed to suspend House rules and rush a delay vote through. But the delay did receive 90 more votes for it than against it in the House, and Gibbs predicted the House would take up delay legislation next week under regular rules, with only a majority vote required.
"We never really dug deep enough to understand all the consequences that would attend the DTV transition -- not just the intended good results, but all the unintended consequences, too, the ones that usually cause the big problems," he said. "It's because we didn't have a well-thought-out and coherent and coordinated plan to ease the transition -- a plan to combine the resources we needed to avoid disruption."
There's been a "patchwork of disjointed efforts" to address the DTV transition, Copps added. "We didn't have a sense of real urgency until it was too late," he said.
The FCC is taking several steps on the assumption that the DTV transition will happen Feb. 17, Copps said. The agency is focusing on consumer outreach, including field operations and its Web site, to inform people about the transition, he said.
The agency is also working to figure out which consumers will be most at risk of losing all TV reception, and it is "coordinating nonstop" with the NTIA and private groups on education efforts, he said.
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