[opendtv] Re: Microsoft Says Malfunctioning Device Led to Failed Interference Test

  • From: "johnwillkie" <johnwillkie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 10:10:45 -0700

Duh.  Microsoft is unhappy about the choice they made.  Unless they are
alleging that the FCC damaged the device, this is a non-story.  They should
have made sure they first had a working device.

MS is lying about this.  

I will agree that the NAB response is over the top.  However, if you can't
beat your adversaries when they are down, when can you do it?  There ae
do-overs, but Leonard Kahn might have a different approach to this.  

This is about the NAB doing it's job, and MS failing at theirs.  Frankly, I
think MS should be prosecuted for lying.  Maybe that's why they are lying in
press releases and filings, and not in affadavits.

"Washington politics as usual?"  How trite.  First off, FCC isn't politics,
but policy.  Second, testing has nothing to do with politics and little to
do with policy.  Third, there is nothing usual about Washington these days
or politics.  But other that that, your throw-away line stands by itself.

John Willkie

-----Mensaje original-----
De: opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] En
nombre de Craig Birkmaier
Enviado el: Tuesday, August 21, 2007 5:39 AM
Para: OpenDTV Mail List
Asunto: [opendtv] Microsoft Says Malfunctioning Device Led to Failed
Interference Test

http://www.tvtechnology.com/pages/s.0015/t.7863.html

Microsoft Says Malfunctioning Device Led to Failed Interference Test

 
August 16, 2007


Microsoft wants a do-over after a device failed an FCC interference 
test Aug. 9; the software giant says a faulty device is to blame.

The device ("Prototype A"), designed to operate on so-called White 
Space in the DTV spectrum, failed to detect DTV signals as designed. 
In a filing, Microsoft claims that in the presence of FCC engineers, 
a further test revealed that a scanner in the device had been 
damaged, making the device fail to detect-and thus avoid interfering 
with-DTV signals. The company also complained that the FCC held a 
spare, working Prototype A and did not use it for any testing.
NAB, vigilant against devices that might interfere with DTV, mocked 
Microsoft's excuse, calling the company's statements "perplexing".

"Microsoft doesn't seem to get that the FCC process is not a game and 
they cannot have a do-over," NAB Executive VP for Administration and 
Agencies Douglas S. Wiley wrote in a letter to Microsoft. "On behalf 
of the entire U.S. broadcasting industry, it is: 1) outrageous that 
Microsoft now claims the device did not work, after the fact; 2) 
unacceptable that the high tech industry spent immensely valuable FCC 
and government time and engineering resources only to, in the end, 
claim a faulty device was to blame for an undesirable result. With 
the immense importance of the testing to innumerable stakeholders, 
one would think that your industry would certainly ensure the good 
working order of the prototype device(s), at the very least.


END of article


I'm not defending Microsoft here. In balance they have done more to 
harm the DTV transition than helping it along.

BUT

The NAB response is "over-the-top."

Almost as if they are saying: "How dare they waste the time of the 
bureaucrats that we have controlled for decades..."

I seem to remember some industry tests of COFDM versus 8-VSB, which 
were followed by FCC tests. If the NAB statement above were applied 
to these tests, the shoe would be on the other foot.  to paraphrase 
the statement above:

"With the immense importance of the testing to innumerable 
stakeholders, one would think that broadcasters would certainly 
ensure the good working order of the prototype device(s)used for the 
COFDM/8VSB tests."

Instead these tests were meaningless, due to the use of COFDM 
"receivers" without the proper filtering on the front ends. One might 
even go so far as to suggest that these tests were purposely rigged.

Such is the reality of Washington politics as usual...

Craig

 
 
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