
gary.buhrmaster at gmail
May 30, 2012, 10:12 AM
Post #16 of 16
(744 views)
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On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Preston Crow <pc-mythtv08a [at] crowcastle> wrote: .... > The disadvantages are that you might have to pay a fee for the card Currently, CableCards cost a few dollars a month (your particular franchise will vary). Under the proposed FCC rule change allowing basic tier encryption, CableCards will be "free"(*) for (at least) basic tier decoding for (at least) two years (longer in some cases), and then somewhere between free and $1/month (estimated based on local franchise regulations). Same for the basic basic HD STBs(**) that will support the existing no-STB TV (using clear QAM today). None of those pricing numbers addresses the various fees for the cable itself, nor any equipment needed to use the CableCard or the basic basic STB. > and you can only record one channel per tuner This is an issue that is considered "fringe". Yes, this list is self-selected with people who do/want this. The number of customers are considered small (by the MSOs and the FCC) to not be a significant decision point. Vocal, yes. Large, no. While a perhaps irrelevant data point, Cablevision (the largest MSO with an existing waiver) had around .1% of their customers request a "free" STB/CableCard. That is in the noise values of irrelevance of customer numbers. Gary (*) Interestingly, while Comcast, TWC, etal. are agreeing to provide "free" equipment for (at least) two years, some of the smaller players are very worried that they cannot afford to provide that equipment for free, and are asking for a potential waiver to the waiver, to allow them to recoup (minimal) costs in their jurisdictions. I presume they are worried about not having the deep pockets (or larger credit lines) to front the monies for a roll out, since the recovery of the up front monies will be over the long term (fewer truck rolls, less theft of service (resulting in some new customers :-), etc.) The FCC has tended to be willing to grant waivers to the small players to meet unique issues in their areas. (**) I will note that the Comcast DTA (a basic basic STB for SD basic tier only) does not do full CableCard like encryption, nor full channel authorization management. It uses a simplified 3DES encryption as specified in a SCTE doc whose number I do not recall right now (using a cost optimized decoding chip). A basic basic HD STB basic tier only box might do same and be quite cheap to manufacture). _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list mythtv-users [at] mythtv http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
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