Comcast

OK. This is kind of … well… I want to say bad things about Comcast, especially the move to digital cable TV. What this ultimately means for high-end audio is unclear, the rush of people abandoning TV for internet video will probably be good for computer audio – since people will be used to using a computer for ‘living-room type entertainment’ and bad for old-style components-in-the-livingroom setups. But do not know for sure. Obviously.

Anyway, the move to digital cable from analog has been disastrous. I have some programs still recorded on a TiVo from the analog cable days, and here are the differences:

* The audio is both brighter and more muffled at the same time. Words are MUCH harder to understand now. When the sound gets a little too loud then it is hard, edgy and harsh.

* Roughly half of the picture is chopped off (all the sides have been cropped off about 25%)

* Blacks and grays are now black (many darkish movies are now unwatchable)

* changing channels now takes about 5 to 10 seconds (presumably it is sending a signal over the internet for each button push, and they are very slow at responding, unlike Google search which responds immediately each letter you type. for example)

* As people migrate away from TV, the quality of the programming has declined to primarily appeal to the types of people who do not feel comfortable on the internet.

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Like most people, we have no choice but to use Comcast. We used to have a small cable company for Boulder County, Jones Intercable, but Comcast bought them out. What happens is that companies here in the U.S. can buy out a small competitor, take over their customer base, lower services and raise prices for those customers, and then use the resulting profits [and promise of future profits] to leverage and buy out yet another small competitor, repeating the process over and over until there are no small competitors left.

I do not really bemoan the end of TV, as such – but to have it end this way is kind of sad. I understand Google TV will offer internet video (YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, etc) in a large screen format in our living-rooms, which is great but I do not see that having a high-end sound system hooked up to your video system is going to be of much benefit [it definitely WAS for analog cable, which I heartily enjoyed for 25 years; with digital cable it has been hit and miss… the source quality being so bad. Now with internet video… it isn’t as bad as digital cable, but it ain’t ‘CD quality’ which all of a sudden we are looking *UP* to… ? *sigh*].