[opendtv] Re: News: Glitches Come to Light in Wilmington

  • From: Adam Goldberg <adam_g@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2008 07:26:46 -0700 (PDT)

Interestingly, "couldn't get the converter box to work properly" is the 
diagnosis when, e.g., the caller didn't have the TV set to the correct INPUT.


----- Original Message ----
From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, September 9, 2008 9:15:13 AM
Subject: [opendtv] News: Glitches Come to Light in Wilmington

http://www.tvnewsday.com/articles/2008/09/09/daily.9/

Glitches Come to Light in Wilmington

By Jim Barthold

TVNEWSDAY, Sep 9 2008, 8:39 AM ET

Trouble with D-to-A converter boxes and antennas, not a lack of 
awareness about the DTV conversion, drove calls to TV stations and 
the local cable TV provider in Wilmington, N.C., yesterday after the 
five-county market became the nation's first to abandon analog 
television.
]
"Almost everybody is aware; it's that their equipment is not working 
correctly," said Connie Book, associate dean of the Elon University 
School of Communications.

Book led a group of her students who helped local stations and Time 
Warner Cable answer phones after the stations cut off their analog 
service at noon and forced over-the-air viewers to pick up the 
stations' digital signals.

The students also recorded the number and nature of the calls.

As of this morning, they had logged 143 calls, 104 from people who 
said they relied solely on over-the-air TV.

Wilmington is the nation's 135th largest TV market with about 180,000 
TV households. Between 13,000 and 15,000 had relied solely on analog 
broadcasting.

Most of the callers to the stations had digital TVs or converter 
boxes, but still couldn't get a picture, according to the Elon 
students.

Forty-one percent complained that couldn't find a signal; 26 percent 
said they had trouble with the antenna; and 21 percent said they 
simply couldn't get their converter boxes to work properly.

All but one caller said they had been aware of the DTV transition, 
confirming a survey that the NAB had conducted prior to the analog 
cut-off.

Most of the calls were taken by Raycom Media's NBC affiliate WECT 
(49.2 percent) and Morris Network's ABC affiliate WWAY (36.6 percent).

"We had a few calls from people that didn't scan their converter box 
when they hooked it up," said Andy Combs, general manager of WWAY.

"We had a couple people call up that needed to adjust their antenna; 
just those types of adjustments."

The calls to the stations and Time Warner Cable do not provide a full picture.

Broadcasting & Cable reported last night that a call center at 
Southeastern Community College received about 75 calls and another in 
Bladen county received between 25 and 30. In both cases, most were 
complaints from people who couldn't receive WECT.

Still to be heard from is the FCC. Chairman Kevin Martin and 
Commissioner Michael Copps were in downtown Wilmington yesterday at 
noon for the ceremonial switch from analog to digital.

But after that the FCC went mute. An agency rep did not return phone 
calls seeking information on the number of calls that the agency had 
received in the wake of the cut off.

Book told TVNewsday late yesterday that she had heard that the FCC 
had fielded 500 calls.

The commercial stations in Wilmington, along with a low-power 
religious station belonging to Trinity Broadcasting, had volunteered 
to cut off their analog signals more than five months ahead of the 
rest of the country so that government officials would have a better 
idea of what to expect from the nationwide switch, slated for Feb. 
17, 2009.

With the help of the local broadcasters and the NAB, the FCC mounted 
a massive campaign in the Wilmington to alert viewers to the Sept. 8 
switch and to make sure they took steps to avoid losing their 
broadcast signals.

They were told they could sign up for cable or satellite TV, buy a 
new digital TV set or buy a set-top converter box that would all them 
to receive the digital signals on their old analog TV sets.

"Now they realize that the time is here and the channels didn't 
miraculously appear so they have to fix something or get better 
antennas," said Dan Ullmer, chief engineer of WECT-WSFX, the NBC and 
Fox affiliates.

It's led to a run at consumer electronics stores "and a lot of them 
are selling out of some products," Ullmer said.

The whole experience is providing a lesson in what must be done to 
avoid confusion and widespread loss of service, said Connie Knox, 
general manager of WILM, Capitol Broadcasting's low-power CBS 
affiliate.

"My suggestion is that [larger] markets get together and make the 
switch earlier than just waiting until Feb. 17," she said. "If they 
don't, they're going to have a much bigger problem on their hands."

Wilmington stations flooded the airwaves with PSAs and even the fire 
department, in small town fashion, volunteered to visit homes and 
adjust antennas, she said.

That's probably not going to happen in bigger markets and it's a 
reason for concern, she said.
Not all the initial feedback was negative, according to Book.

WILM was a revelation for some new digital viewers because its 
low-power analog signal was difficult to receive off air.

"We have a couple calls on that because people are excited about it," 
said Book.

Viewers are also learning that the four local commercial stations 
plus noncommercial WUNC now deliver 15 digital signals, Knox said.

The market's two noncommercial stations are not participating in the 
early switch to digital because they are part of the state's 
emergency communications network.


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