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Author Topic: TV GUIDE NETWORK moves from Analog Cable to Digital Cable.  (Read 2258 times)
SanDiegoInExile
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« Reply #20 on: November 08, 2009, 01:42:28 AM »

Thanks for the suggestion, Pat Cook, but Mom is on a fixed income. She can't afford to get digital cable. She has paid for a 12 month promotional price of $10 a month. God knows how much it will be by the time the promotion ends. Unlike PGE and ATT, there is no Lifeline/Senior discount on Cable TV. Probably because Cable is considered a luxury rather than a neccesity. The cheapest digital pakage here is for the digital starter package (around $58 plus tax).

Getting back to the "no listings" dilemma.  Since every cable system is different, you might want to call Comcast and see if they lease the set-top digital box WITHOUT upgrading to digital channel tiers.

As I noted earlier, we had basic cable AND the box. The only channels that "worked" on the digital spectrum (channels 101-1999) were the "public access" channels that TimeWarner had migrated from analog, Music Choice, duplicate channels from the analog 2-75, on-demand channels, a few of the local subchannel all-weather channels, and the on-screen guide via remote control.  The box was just 4.95 a month.  And even if Comcast charges $10 a month, that's still substantially less than $58+tax.

You may hit a wall at customer service, but I'll bet other folks have complained about this as well. Every city licenses the cable company and has a designated contact in city government. You can always contact that office and file a complaint against Comcast.  The cable companies absolutely HATE that.

Worse comes to worse, use TitanTV and print out the daily listings for Grandma and mail them to her. There is a feature on their listings that will give you an entire 24-hour listing by channel. Since she only watches a few channels, you are looking at 4-5 pages per day.  The schedule is loaded 2 weeks in advance, so you can make your own TV Guide.
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Madmansam
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« Reply #21 on: November 08, 2009, 11:47:02 AM »

Thanks San Diego. Actually it's Mom, not Grandma!  Cheesy Comcast, here won't rent out the digital receiver unless you have the digital service. But a great suggestion is the one on printing the program schedule from Titan TV. Now I need to get a printer to do it. Still that's a great suggestion! Thanks!  Smiley
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azumanga
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« Reply #22 on: November 08, 2009, 09:46:08 PM »

Comcast, here won't rent out the digital receiver unless you have the digital service.

Isn't that against FCC regulations?
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Pat Cook
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« Reply #23 on: November 08, 2009, 11:02:45 PM »

Comcast, here won't rent out the digital receiver unless you have the digital service.

Isn't that against FCC regulations?
Nope.

Cheers Cheesy
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Pat Cook, KB0OXD (Ham Radio Callsign)
Back To The Future Radio & TV (Old Time Radio & Classic TV) | WSO-AM Radio & TV (Old & Classic Soap Operas)
mrschimpf
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« Reply #24 on: November 08, 2009, 11:38:32 PM »

You may hit a wall at customer service, but I'll bet other folks have complained about this as well. Every city licenses the cable company and has a designated contact in city government. You can always contact that office and file a complaint against Comcast.  The cable companies absolutely HATE that.

This sadly depends on market these days as the telecoms and cable companies talk the state legislatures into allowing state authorities to blanket-license them across their service areas and cutting the cities out of everything except basic right-of-way fees. That's the way it is in Wisconsin after AT&T convinced the state to pass a law allowing deregulation under the cover of 'lower fees' (says someone who gets lucky enough to pay $10 more starting next month for Charter...hooray for me!).
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vchimpanzee
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« Reply #25 on: November 09, 2009, 01:18:21 PM »

I find it strange that the Sacramento Bee removed their TV listings, The Fresno Bee ( Sacramento's sister paper) just expanded their Sunday TV guide ,but you must request it to be added to the Sunday Paper for 29 cents extra a week.

With the trend towards online and on-screen listings, the listing booklets are no longer cost-effective for newspapers.  Personally, I've never cared for them; back in the day, the old-school TV Guide was more in-depth and easier to navigate.

One paper where I live asked subscribers to say they wanted it and they got it. That includes libraries, which I'm gratful for because this book has some interesting stuff in it my local paper used to have.

My local paper discontinued it but asked people to subscribe for about $25 a year to this book that gets delivered. I did, but I haven't used it yet. I'm glad I've got it as a record of what was on and for the articles, although I was hoping for more of those. With TiVo and another paper at the local library that puts its listings in a weekly entertainment section, I haven't really needed it, but if that library ever misses getting that day's paper ...
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vchimpanzee
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« Reply #26 on: November 09, 2009, 01:24:34 PM »

Worse comes to worse, use TitanTV and print out the daily listings for Grandma and mail them to her. There is a feature on their listings that will give you an entire 24-hour listing by channel. Since she only watches a few channels, you are looking at 4-5 pages per day.  The schedule is loaded 2 weeks in advance, so you can make your own TV Guide.
That sounds like what TiVo does. I'm getting to the point where I can figure out how to access this. Really detailed, too.
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vchimpanzee
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« Reply #27 on: November 09, 2009, 01:26:49 PM »

One problem that hasn't been addressed. What if you're in a motel room and you were expecting a listings channel? Not every motel has Internet access. Not everyone would want to carry around a computer.

It was pointed out to me that I could have brought my newspaper TV section from home. And the channel list is on top of the TV. Still, I didn't.   
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MarcB
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« Reply #28 on: November 09, 2009, 10:08:07 PM »

OnWhat if you're in a motel room and you were expecting a listings channel?
And the channel list is on top of the TV.

EPIC FAIL. Half the time those charts aren't accurate. Anyway when I was younger my family and I liked vacationing in Brattleboro, Vermont. We usually stayed at the Super 8 Motel. They had the local Adelphia Cable Channel line-up that everyone in Brattleboro who had cable had, which included The TV Guide Channel. Only one or 2 channels were different from the line-up. I haven't been up there in a few years so I don't know if The Super 8 still has the in-town cable now that it's COMCAST.
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imhomerjay
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« Reply #29 on: November 10, 2009, 05:40:40 AM »

Flip through the channels? 

Seriously, does everything need to be gift-wrapped for you?  Sometimes you need to do a little work on your own...or read a book.
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