Americans Have Fewer TVs On Average Than They Did In 2009 (arstechnica.com) 164
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Americans went from having an average of 2.6 TVs per household in 2009 to having 2.3 TVs in 2015, according to survey data from the U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA). The data comes from the agency's Residential Energy Consumption Survey (RECS), which has been conducted periodically since the 1970s to understand American energy use. The 2015 survey included 5,600 respondents who were contacted in person and then given an option to follow up by mail or online. A fine-detail report on the survey results is due to be released in April 2017. The latest data shows that in 2015, 2.6 percent of households had no TV at all, a jump from the previous four surveys in 2009, 2005, 2001, and 1997 in which a steady 1.2 to 1.3 percent of households didn't own a TV. The 2015 data also showed that the number of people with three TVs or more dropped in 2015. That year, 39 percent of households had more than three TVs, whereas 44 percent had more than three TVs in 2009. Interestingly, the number of households with one or two TVs increased in 2015 to 58 percent, from 54 percent in 2009.
Buggy Whips (Score:3)
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If 97.4% of households own a buggy whip, that's news to me. I got rid of my TV around 2006, but I don't see many people doing that. More likely TVs will decline as baby boomers die off and are replaced by a generation with more pirates.
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I wonder how many other cord-cutters are the same.
Plenty. I didn't have a TV until I was married. TV is poor entertainment compared to a fast PC and a Steam account.
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Moi aussi. Though I do spend an inordinate amount of time watching university lectures on YouTube. Who would have thought that string theory, black holes and viruses could be so interesting. YMMV.
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Not every screen is a TV, you fucked-up shit face.
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It's a LCD panel. But no TV.
Guess what, they exist. I know, an outlandish concept, but you might want to take a look at that newfangled thing called a "computer monitor". It's, like, kinda a TV, just without all the baggage.
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The painful thing is that the crap on TV isn't by any means superior to the crap you find on YouTube.
And I'm not even talking about the various TV programs that are, legal or not, available on YouTube.
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I don't have any buggy whips, but I was No TV Guy(TM) for over a decade. These days it is obvious to have a TV, because they all have inputs that match on of the outputs on a computer!
They make a useful media screen, and there is even a TV tuner if I need broadcast emergency information! Of course, in an actual emergency the info feed will be looped on weather band radio, so it is minimally useful, but still.
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People watch on phones, laptops, computers, etc. and stream without having 'Cable TV'
Not only that...but another angle to this. Around 2009 I believe was when cable companies had the switch to digital in full swing...thus requiring a cable box per TV nationwide. I presume a number of people decided it wasn't worth $xyz/month for that extra TV to have a box attached so just gave up.
I have two TVs technically but not a single one is attached to cable TV service. A computer and a media player for netflix, e
Basic math is "interesting"? (Score:3)
FTFS:
How is that interesting. The whole article is that the 3+ television category went down. How is it interesting, or even not tautological, that the other two categories (0, 1-2) go up?
Bigger TVs (Score:2)
and smaller (Score:2)
I see plenty of people watching their phones, Computers, and iPads instead of a TV. I would think that number would reconcile the difference much more than bigger screens.
That all said, disposable income for lower and all ranks of middle class is considerably down over the last decade. That means less toys and gadgets around those same houses. The Middle class has always been the source of fluid income in the economy, and starving those people has caused a big stagnation in the country.
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Agreed on the disposable income connundrum too, especially when you consider how many people are already shelling out for a smartphone that's quite capable for their media consumption as both of us have noted
I'd also add thag the decline in home ownership may controbute too, a TV is one more large object to move if you don't expect to stay in the same place for a long time. At the very least only having 1 TV ma
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Disposable income may well be down but the price of a TV is down by a *LOT* more both in real terms and absolute price.
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Disposable income may well be down but the price of a TV is down by a *LOT* more both in real terms and absolute price.
Cost of a TV is *down*? That's news to me.
We purchased our last TV for mid-range $150 - a 24" CRT back in 2006; it died in 2011ish. A mid-range today is considered 40" and is around $400-500. I would be surprised if the average TV price was below $500 as most sales are listing over 500.
Yeah, the tech has changed but the cost is definitely higher.
Now, if you're comparing a 40" TV in 2006 to a 40" TV today, then yes the cost is down. But that's different from the average cost of TVs sold.
Upgrade from older TVs? (Score:4, Interesting)
I know when I upgraded from pre-digital capable TVs to the new HD TVs... I went way down in TV ownership. I disposed of 5 older TVs, and replaced it with one new TV. Once the last 5 years, I've since upgraded that new TV, and put the older one in a second room.
My parents, and many of my friends are the same way. They went from a TV in every room, to one main one... and as the main one was upgraded the others have slowly moved to other living spaces.
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That's pretty much what I've done. When I lived at home with my parents I had a 32" in my bedroom that I used a good deal. 32" to me is about as large as you can go in a bedroom setting.
I bought my own place about 5 years ago and continued with that 32" in the living room for about 4 months before I bought a 46" and the 32" TV went back to the bedroom again. Truthfully though since it's went to the bedroom I have barely used it. For a while I hooked up my PS4 and played upstairs but I've taken to connec
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I have a big bedroom. And a 120" TV 'screen'. Screen is quoted, because it's a projector aimed at a blank wall. I can actually put the TV set in my pocket.
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I started my married life in 1980 with a 12" black and white TV which got little use. A few years later I got a 19" color set and when my kids were toddlers I got rid of that and got a 27" model. When the kids were in middle school that died and I got a 32" model. My kids howled about TVs for their rooms and I told them if they got straight A report cards they could have one. Never happened. Finally my kids left home and now I have 2 TVs. I don't know why, we almost never watch the one in the bedroom.
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My anecdata: I went down to zero TVs!
I watch all my media either a) on my desktop PC if it's something I don't care too much about, usually in a small Netflix window while I mess around elsewhere on the Internet or b) on my phone or laptop in bed/on the couch.
I sometimes miss having a nice big TV in the lounge room on the few occasions my partner & I want to watch something together. But it's also nice not having a TV being the centrepiece of our living room.
I kind of miss the ability to watch sport but
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My parents' house currently has 4 TVs, with 3 that get used frequently even with them being empty nesters.
I have just 1 tv in the house, in the main living room, and it probably only gets used 4 days per week, mostly on the weekend.. and that's just so our 4 year old can watch a movie or two.
We'll never allow him to have a tv in his room. If we're going to be anti-social, it's at least going to be in the living room which i
Pure coincidence (Score:2)
First they mention a decrease of in households that have 3 TV. Then:
Interestingly, the number of households with one or two TVs increased in 2015 to 58 percent, from 54 percent in 2009.
What we learned today is that over a period of 5 years, some people sold an extra TV and others bought an extra TV.
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Percentages do not work like that. Over 5 years, some people through out a TV --- and are now counted as in the 1-2 range.
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What are you talking about? The fact that people threw away a TV or sold a TV doesn't change how "percentages work".
The point here is that there is no significant change over 5 years, especially given the unreliable polling method they used.
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The 3+ range went down. It's not amazing that the 1-2 range went up and the 0 range went up. In fact, that's exactly how percentages work if some TVs simply disappeared. And in direct contrast to what you said in the OP:
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People don't chuck out all their TVs and buy a whole new lot. When they bought nice, cheap full HD LCD screens, the old CRTs still worked, so they kept them - probably in the kids' bedroom. As soon as they could, while still respecting their parents, the kids chucked the old fashioned junk in the skip, and watched what they want on their big screen phones.
Some people, like us were conned into/bought "HD Ready" (720p) junk - which went the way of the CRTs, producing a thir
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I am totally unsurprised by this.
People don't chuck out all their TVs and buy a whole new lot. When they bought nice, cheap full HD LCD screens, the old CRTs still worked, so they kept them - probably in the kids' bedroom. As soon as they could, while still respecting their parents, the kids chucked the old fashioned junk in the skip, and watched what they want on their big screen phones.
Some people, like us were conned into/bought "HD Ready" (720p) junk - which went the way of the CRTs, producing a third TV in the mix.
I don't know any families that had kids and did not follow this pattern, even if the kids are in primary school. The ones without kids gave their CRTs to relatives, who promptly put them in the skip and went back to their Ipads.
In the long run, the 720p kit will be binned too, and most families will have between 1 and 2 HD screens, probably a big one and a smaller one.
Having a TV does not mean using it with the tuner much of the time. We have a "smart" TV (Dumb as shit in reality) and often use it to share what is on our phone or tablet's screen with the assembled friends and relatives - even if it is a TED talk.
(Mapouka on Youtube is worth a search or too) NSFW.
There is a difference between a TV (viewer+tuner) and a monitor (viewer only). With CRTs being dropped, prices have gone up, so fewer people have replaced the CRTs that died. Cord cutting has become a big thing - and that typically means moving to online stuff using computers/phones/tablets and not having a TV (with tuner) or necessarily a big monitor used like a TV with an external tuner (Roku, etc).
Personally, my kids won't have a TV in their rooms period. We don't have cable, don't watch OTA, etc. The
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In fact, that's exactly how percentages work if some TVs simply disappeared. And in direct contrast to what you said in the OP
No it's not, and no it's not. I get it - I deal with many aspies at work so I know how you think - you're being obsessed with the "sold" part as if it meant the people from group A were selling them to group B. But see, the interpretation in your head is just in your head.
What I meant was essentially the same thing you meant in your post, which came up just a few seconds before mine: there is nothing surprising to see one group getting bigger and the other getting smaller since it's a same population. If I
The death of an industry (Score:2)
The HD screen on my smartphone held 12" from my face is about the same size as my 55" TV, and I already have the smart phone in my pocket virtually everywhere. I can stream and watch most content on it. Why would I need more TVs? To watch cable TV that is chock full of commercials and forces me to watch what they want me to watch on their schedule? The entire cable TV industry is dying a slow death. They would be dead already except for the fact that they are a monopoly and they also have a monopoly on
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Don't confuse a TV with "TV" the service.
A TV is just a display device, and IMHO though I don't subscribe to any cable or satellite services, I still find kicking back on my couch a LOT more comfortable than trying to hold up my smartphone in front of my face (much less 12" away - the eye strain from that would be horrible).
Probably 90% of the video I watch these days is Youtube (with the reamining 10% Netflix) but I still do so on a Roku stick on my TV downstairs.
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Fair enough, but more and more people (myself included) consume online media on our tablets and smart phones, as it is more convenient in many respects than a traditional TV.
BTW, there are only about 3 million Roku total sold on the planet. It seems like there is about 1 smart phone for every human on the planet...
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As with most things, it's a tradeoff. If I'm in the living room, I usually watch on the "big screen". But I sometimes watch in the bedroom or kitchen, and the iPad works fine for that.
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Don't confuse a TV with "TV" the service.
A TV is just a display device, and IMHO though I don't subscribe to any cable or satellite services, I still find kicking back on my couch a LOT more comfortable than trying to hold up my smartphone in front of my face (much less 12" away - the eye strain from that would be horrible).
Probably 90% of the video I watch these days is Youtube (with the reamining 10% Netflix) but I still do so on a Roku stick on my TV downstairs.
If I can, I watch it on the computer, but I'll put the phone/tablet down some where - on an arm of a chair, on the back of the couch (while standing to fold laundry), propped up on the counter (while washing dishes), etc...I don't hold it 12" from my face, but it's highly portable so I can keep watching as I move around.
How much video is consumed? (Score:3)
I'd love to know how much video is consumed per household? Back in 2009, you had a TV in the family room and then probably one in the master bedroom and one in the kids' bedroom(s). Now if you've got a family of 5, you've probably got 5 devices that can all stream video (phones, tablets, tv, roku/chromecast... ).
I'd be American's are watching far more video today than ever before. Very few parents advocate having their 2yr old watch TV, but plenty of them believe $kids_app will make their 2yr old more successful in getting into Stanford or MIT.
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The volume and the content consumed changes with time.
Most of us can recall a time when we were couch potatoes, flipping channels and drinking beer. Looking for something interesting on TV, but not too complicated. I imagine that many of us now are more discriminating about content, repulsed by commercials, and often looking for something that will challenge our mind.
The volume of consumption is probably higher than ever but that's not bad. The video screen has displaced newspapers, magazines, broadcast rad
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I gave up my TV many years ago but spend more time than ever in front of my screens. Quality time.
And how do you do that? Sitting on an office chair in your den while watching a computer monitor? Or sitting on a couch holding an iPad? That doesn't look like quality time to me.
I have an immense TV in my living room with all the apps built-in and yet I don't have cable. And I can cast stuff from the couch. Now THAT is quality time.
We have more screens (Score:2)
Everyone has one or two personal screens on top of the TVs in the house, less need for so many TVs
A serious issue. (Score:2)
What we're really seeing here is the real life long-term damage of Wii Sports. People got it Christmas of 2006 and immediately destroyed their TVs by accidentally chucking the controller at the TV. Everyone saw the pictures, had a good laugh and Nintendo covered it all up by muddling search results by naming their new controller attachment the "Wii Nunchuk" which they knew would be dubbed the "Wii Chuck" and thus misdirect everyone looking for information about chucking their Wii controllers at the TV. S
watching tv is stupid (Score:3)
watching tv is stupid
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I just point to the custom T-Shirt with my pay stub printed on it.
Hmm (Score:2)
I have a tv in the living room that gets used every day and a tv in the bedroom that hasn't been used in several years.
It's an old CRT type tv I don't really have any need for it anymore but it's a TV/DVD/VCR/FM radio combo unit and surprisingly all the functions still work (the tv too w/ a converter box) so I haven't been able to convince myself to get rid of it since it all still works....and it happens to have the last known working VHS player in it in the family.
Is this even statistically significant? (Score:2)
Americans have gone from an average of 2.6 to 2.3 TVs in a six year period but what kind of error bars are on that?
Let's think this through...
- TVs last a long time so even though someone might upgrade on a TV the old one might still be working when it's replaced.
- That TV that's moved from the primary viewing location to it's new home might not even be used, or not used enough to matter. I've seen people put TVs in basements, garages, and spare bedrooms just because they wanted a new TV but didn't want to
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Perhaps some TVs died and were thrown out, which cuts back on the number of TVs. If LCD TVs do no last as long as CRT TVs did this could permanently depress the average amount of TVs somewhat.
The Impact of Tablets (Score:2)
I suspect that is going on here is that with the advent of Netflix and tablets we now have most people using tablets as nothing more than a small portable TV that will also show them their Facebook feed. For the average suburbanite slob it has it all, your trashy, fake TV and your trashy, fake friends!
Switch off effect (Score:2)
So people kept say a b/w TV set in guests rooms and when the TV became useless they didn't bought another TV set because was not really necessary.
ok.. (Score:2)
100 channels and nothing on (Score:2)
That's basically what you get when the quality of the junk you produce is LOWER than what amateurs on YouTube crank out.
What do you get on TV today? Pseudo-reality soaps that are way more pseudo than reality, about forgettable idiots that can't even act, let alone be interesting. Reports and even more soaps about the life of wannabe-celebrities nobody with more than a brain cell could give a shit about. Now mix into that some other kinda-reality shows, from court TV to high speed chase TV and you know what'
There are lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:2)
In 2009, most of us still had working CRTs. Now we have replaced old sets with, typically, one bigscreen that we splurged on.
Below Average (Score:2)
1 billion hours watched on you tube (Score:2)
But still, most of the streaming is done to handheld tablets, or phones or laptops or netbooks. My 14 inch chromebook screen at 3 feet covers the same range as the 42 inch across the room. Unless there is more than one person watching the same thing, it does not make sense to cast anything to the
Digital encryption (Score:4, Insightful)
.
I had to cut back on the number of TVs because of those increases due to digital encryption. $20+ per month for a set-top box, what a rip off.
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...There are now three times as many (free) over the air channels...
For those that do not have geographical problems with receiving over the air signals, that is a viable choice. For those of us who can receive no over the air channels due to hills and mountains, over the air is not an option.
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Yes, I fall in that demographic (Score:2)
Back in 2009, I had 4 TV's hooked up in my house. Now I only have 3, and just two of them have cable boxes attached to them.
The big reason for this was the increase in fees that the cable and telco companies charge for "HD" cable boxes. The old SD cable boxes only costed about $3 a month each, but the HD ones cost about $9 a month. If you want an HD DVR, that's more like $12 a month. The price inflation on the rental prices for this equipment is insane. You don't really have a choice about getting them, eit
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You don't really have a choice about getting them, either, as almost every channel over the cable line is encrypted now.
You can buy one outright if they still support CableCARD - but they likely charge almost as much for the card as they do for the whole tuner/DVDR. SDV doesn't work with CableCARD, which seems to be more about blocking CableCARD than freeing up unused channels for Internet.
A TV is just a screen now (Score:2)
There is less and less difference between a TV and a monitor nowadays.
A modern TV can make a decent computer monitor and a computer/tablet/smartphone can be used the same way as a TV.
That people buy less screens with built-in tuners doesn't mean much.
People with no TVs (Score:2)
I have a good friend who's wife is proud to say they have no TV in the house.
That being said, they stream so many TV shows that it's not funny.
Not having a TV has gone from being a stigmata in the 60s to a sign of arrogance in the 90s to being a sign of penny pinching in the modern age.
No TV since 2001 (Score:2)
I honestly got tired of being lied to.
Re:Life (Score:5, Funny)
My interpretation is different. The kids are on their iPhone, the mom is on Pinterest and the dad is talking to fake women on Ashley Madison.
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Precisely. The headline makes it sound like having fewer TVs is a bad thing!
For broadcasters (OTA) and Cable Companies it is. For everyone else, it's not.
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it is possible to actually talk to your family
Not everyone has an unlimited cellular plan.
Sans paddle, nothing but floaters (Score:2)
I hear the latest episode is.... up
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Not seeing iy, my 70+ year old parents and brother who moved back in with them to help - Have 6 Screens. 3 bedrooms, the living room, basement crash pad and kitchen.
I have three - one for the Roku, one for my PC, one in the laundry room dedicated solely for the camera system.
I think this is fake news - there is something called an LED screen that television is watched on that is most likely not being counted.
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1) television is being defined as a screen with a tuner capable of receiving broadcast channels.
2) anecdote is not data.
Re: Per Capita Numbers? (Score:2)
Data is simply the aggregate of many anecdotes that have been selected through varying different techniques that allegedly make them an accurate reflection of society as a whole.
Remember those surveys that said Trump would lose? That data surely wasn't worth the paper it was printed on.
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Yep - this makes complete sense. The two TVs we do have are used purely as displays for Chromecast and games. We don't actually watch 'TV' on them. I also have various computer monitors, some of which are big enough that you could comfortably use them as 'TVs'.
Increasingly I think distinguishing TVs from monitors by whether or not they have a tuner will become meaningless, as more and more people are just using them to watch content from one HDMI/DisplayPort source or another, which may be a timeshifted 'TV
Re: Per Capita Numbers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't that what he's saying? Monitors don't have ota TV tuners. More people are using monitors in place of TV's. OTA TV therefore, is on the decline. The article missed the forest. Streaming, as we all know, is become our future.
Indeed. I suspect the tuner-TV combo is close to its final generation. We have a TV, but it's probably our last. All watching is done on computers. We have a HD-Homerun that tunes and dumps the video onto ethernet, which is enormously more useful. The youngsters seem to watch everything on phones. Presumably the children of the youngsters will be watching TV on their 5th generation iWatches.
It'll only take 2 generations to die off and the TV will seem like a quaint throwback and OTA TV transmission will be switched off and the spectrum sold to the highest bidder.
Re: Per Capita Numbers? (Score:4, Interesting)
What I don't get is why people WANT to watch movies on their phones or tablets instead of reclined in a sofa, looking at a 50" screen or bigger.
Ignoring the question of OTA, Cable, Satellite or streaming, wouldn't YOU prefer looking at a big screen while eating popcorn or other snacks?
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My laptop has higher resolution and subtends a greater viewing angle than my TV. Park it on my lap, park myself on the recliner couch, and I really prefer it to my TV. Granted, my 10 year old 42 inch TV is really too small for the room it's in but it's the TV which fits my family room layout so it's not going to change.
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A phone 6 inches from your face is bigger than a 50" screen 6 feet from your face.
Picture quality is actually better on the phone, in most cases (smaller screens are cheaper buy nicer).
Sound is crap on the phone. I have a 5.1 surround system and I watch all my TV on a TV.
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What I don't get is why people WANT to watch movies on their phones or tablets instead of reclined in a sofa, looking at a 50" screen or bigger.
Ignoring the question of OTA, Cable, Satellite or streaming, wouldn't YOU prefer looking at a big screen while eating popcorn or other snacks?
I can watch a movie on my phone while rocking my kid to sleep, continue while I laying one down, and checking on the others, and move about the house - on to doing dishes, laundry, back to my office, etc - all with headphones on, and not having to disturb anyone else.
Can't do that with a 50" TV that's typically mounted on a wall in 1 room.
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And all that convenience for the low, low price of squinting at a tiny screen, head tilted forward to cause neck pains.
Re: Per Capita Numbers? (Score:4, Insightful)
He enjoys one thing, you enjoy another. News at 11.
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Hey bro
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I won't judge. I like movies on a big TV as much as the next guy, but mainly as a family time kind of thing. When I re-watched the old Star Trek series my family wasn't interested, and I watched it on a Kindle sitting on the couch in a different room. I certainly didn't notice any eye strain or neck pain, nor any great desire for a "real" TV. The Kindle was a lot nicer than the TV I grew up with, so maybe it's just an age thing.
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I won't judge...so maybe it's just an age thing.
Kudos for the drive-by snark.
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It wasn't meant to be snark... I was saying that people my age (ahem, old) might be less picky about crappy TVs, since even a cheap tablet is superior to what I grew up with.
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You have to remember, young eyes don't have to squint. I remember the first time I saw a someone working on a high-end unix workstation. There was no way to stand over his shoulder and read the screen--the screen was huge but text was too small. At middle age, I found that even sitting at the screen the text was a little too small. Ten years earlier I don't think I would have had a problem and I would have enjoyed the extra real-estate afforded on the screen.
I, too, wonder at it sometimes. Then I catch myse
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...OTA TV transmission will be switched off and the spectrum sold to the highest bidder.
That'll be a sad day. Other than the on-screen "bugs", OTA is DRM-free. Nothing's stopping me recording, removing or skipping ads, and privately distributing the recordings. Much harder with streaming.
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As a child I remember there being five networks (ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, and the n
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We don't watch OTA in our house
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That depends on if you count your parent's basement as a separate household or not.
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Stick it up your rectum, faggot.
Especially if it's "one turd" of a Tv.
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Bit off-topic, but good is an ATSC tuner? I mean, practically speaking, don't most cable companies encrypt ALL the channels, just because they can? I know Comcast does. In the US, I mean. *sigh*
Umm.. It can tune to the signal received by a TV antenna.
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a TV antenna
This.
I'm shocked by the number of people who don't realize that this option still exists (and was the way we consumed TV for decades). The cable industries brain washing campaign has been quite effective in teaching people to automatically sign up for a $100/month service whenever they want television.
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For some reason, I was thinking of ClearQAM when I read/wrote ATSC. /facepalm
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20Mbps MPEG-2 still looks better than 5Mbps H.264.
And ATSC content is free.
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Of course a desktop PC is the best game machine of all, except for the little detail that it doesn't fit inside your pocket. On the other hand, if you have a decent smartphone (and pretty much everyone does nowadays), just add a $20 bluetooth gamepad and that makes it a nice portable console / emulator.
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Wowzers, you talked to 5,600 people, out of 320,000,000+ in this country.
You link to EIA info [eia.gov] that shows a +4% increase in one-two TV owners.
5000+ is a perfectly fine sample size providing it's a properly randomized sample. Of course it's never a properly randomized sample when it comes to household surveys.
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Get a cable box with an RF modulator, a splitter and run some coax around your house. You can slave a bunch of analog TV sets off the program you are watching in the family room. Not a perfect solution since all the TV sets can only get the same program. But that's how I run a couple of sets that I can watch while going back and forth in my house.