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Cable television

Cable television is a system of delivering television programming to consumers via radio frequency (RF) signals transmitted through coaxial cables, or in more recent systems, light pulses through fibre-optic cables. This contrasts with broadcast television (also known as terrestrial television), in which the television signal is transmitted over-the-air by radio waves and received by a television antenna attached to the television; or satellite television, in which the television signal is transmitted over-the-air by radio waves from a communications satellite orbiting the Earth, and received by a satellite dish antenna on the roof. FM radio programming, high-speed Internet, telephone services, and similar non-television services may also be provided through these cables. Analog television was standard in the 20th century, but since the 2000s, cable systems have been upgraded to digital cable operation.

A coaxial cable used to carry cable television onto subscribers' premises
A set-top box, an electronic device which cable subscribers use to connect the cable signal to their television sets. Presented unit is a Cisco RNG200N for QAM digital cable television system used in North America.

A "cable channel" (sometimes known as a "cable network") is a television network available via cable television. When available through satellite television, including direct broadcast satellite providers such as DirecTV or Dish Network, as well as via IPTV providers such as Verizon FIOS and U-verse TV, this is referred to as a "satellite channel". Alternative terms include "non-broadcast channel" or "programming service", the latter being mainly used in legal contexts. The abbreviation "CATV" is used in the US for cable television and originally stood for community antenna television, from cable television's origins in 1948; in areas where over-the-air TV reception was limited by distance from transmitters or mountainous terrain, large community antennas were constructed, and cable was run from them to individual homes.

In 1968, 6.4% of Americans had cable television. The number increased to 7.5% in 1978. By 1988, 52.8% of all households were using cable. The number further increased to 62.4% in 1994.[1]

Distribution

 
A cable television distribution box (left) in the basement of a building in Germany (Kabel BW network, now Vodafone), with a splitter (right) which supplies the signal to separate cables which go to different rooms

To receive cable television at a given location, cable distribution lines must be available on the local utility poles or underground utility lines. Coaxial cable brings the signal to the customer's building through a service drop, an overhead or underground cable. If the subscriber's building does not have a cable service drop, the cable company will install one. The standard cable used in the U.S. is RG-6, which has a 75 ohm impedance, and connects with a type F connector. The cable company's portion of the wiring usually ends at a distribution box on the building exterior, and built-in cable wiring in the walls usually distributes the signal to jacks in different rooms to which televisions are connected. Multiple cables to different rooms are split off the incoming cable with a small device called a splitter. There are two standards for cable television; older analog cable, and newer digital cable which can carry data signals used by digital television receivers such as high-definition television (HDTV) equipment. All cable companies in the United States have switched to or are in the course of switching to digital cable television since it was first introduced in the late 1990s.

Most cable companies require a set-top box (cable converter box) or a slot on one's TV set for conditional access module cards[2] to view their cable channels, even on newer televisions with digital cable QAM tuners, because most digital cable channels are now encrypted, or "scrambled", to reduce cable service theft. A cable from the jack in the wall is attached to the input of the box, and an output cable from the box is attached to the television, usually the RF-IN or composite input on older TVs. Since the set-top box only decodes the single channel that is being watched, each television in the house requires a separate box. Some unencrypted channels, usually traditional over-the-air broadcast networks, can be displayed without a receiver box.[3] The cable company will provide set-top boxes based on the level of service a customer purchases, from basic set-top boxes with a standard-definition picture connected through the standard coaxial connection on the TV, to high-definition wireless digital video recorder (DVR) receivers connected via HDMI or component. Older analog television sets are "cable ready" and can receive the old analog cable without a set-top box. To receive digital cable channels on an analog television set, even unencrypted ones, requires a different type of box, a digital television adapter supplied by the cable company or purchased by the subscriber. Another new distribution method that takes advantage of the low cost high quality DVB distribution to residential areas, uses TV gateways to convert the DVB-C, DVB-C2 stream to IP for distribution of TV over IP network in the home. Many cable companies offer internet access through DOCSIS.[4]

Principle of operation

 
Diagram of a modern hybrid fiber-coaxial cable television system. At the regional headend, the TV channels are sent multiplexed on a light beam which travels through optical fiber trunklines, which fan out from distribution hubs to optical nodes in local communities. Here the light signal from the fiber is translated to a radio frequency electrical signal, which is distributed through coaxial cable to individual subscriber homes.

In the most common system, multiple television channels (as many as 500, although this varies depending on the provider's available channel capacity) are distributed to subscriber residences through a coaxial cable, which comes from a trunkline supported on utility poles originating at the cable company's local distribution facility, called the "headend". Many channels can be transmitted through one coaxial cable by a technique called frequency division multiplexing. At the headend, each television channel is translated to a different frequency. By giving each channel a different frequency "slot" on the cable, the separate television signals do not interfere with each other. At an outdoor cable box on the subscriber's residence, the company's service drop cable is connected to cables distributing the signal to different rooms in the building. At each television, the subscriber's television or a set-top box provided by the cable company translates the desired channel back to its original frequency (baseband), and it is displayed onscreen. Due to widespread cable theft in earlier analog systems, the signals are typically encrypted on modern digital cable systems, and the set-top box must be activated by an activation code sent by the cable company before it will function, which is only sent after the subscriber signs up. If the subscriber fails to pay their bill, the cable company can send a signal to deactivate the subscriber's box, preventing reception.

There are also usually "upstream" channels on the cable to send data from the customer box to the cable headend, for advanced features such as requesting pay-per-view shows or movies, cable internet access, and cable telephone service. The "downstream" channels occupy a band of frequencies from approximately 50 MHz to 1 GHz, while the "upstream" channels occupy frequencies of 5 to 42 MHz. Subscribers pay with a monthly fee. Subscribers can choose from several levels of service, with "premium" packages including more channels but costing a higher rate. At the local headend, the feed signals from the individual television channels are received by dish antennas from communication satellites. Additional local channels, such as local broadcast television stations, educational channels from local colleges, and community access channels devoted to local governments (PEG channels) are usually included on the cable service. Commercial advertisements for local business are also inserted in the programming at the headend (the individual channels, which are distributed nationally, also have their own nationally oriented commercials).

Hybrid fiber-coaxial

Modern cable systems are large, with a single network and headend often serving an entire metropolitan area. Most systems use hybrid fiber-coaxial (HFC) distribution; this means the trunklines that carry the signal from the headend to local neighborhoods are optical fiber to provide greater bandwidth and also extra capacity for future expansion. At the headend, the electrical signal is translated into an optical signal and sent through the fiber. The fiber trunkline goes to several distribution hubs, from which multiple fibers fan out to carry the signal to boxes called optical nodes in local communities. At the optical node, the optical signal is translated back into an electrical signal and carried by coaxial cable distribution lines on utility poles, from which cables branch out to a series of signal amplifiers and line extenders. These devices carry the signal to customers via passive RF devices called taps.

History in North America

Cable television[5] began in the United States as a commercial business in 1950, although there were small-scale systems by hobbyists in the 1940s.

The early systems simply received weak (broadcast) channels, amplified them, and sent them over unshielded wires to the subscribers, limited to a community or to adjacent communities. The receiving antenna would be taller than any individual subscriber could afford, thus bringing in stronger signals; in hilly or mountainous terrain it would be placed at a high elevation.

At the outset, cable systems only served smaller communities without television stations of their own, and which could not easily receive signals from stations in cities because of distance or hilly terrain. In Canada, however, communities with their own signals were fertile cable markets, as viewers wanted to receive American signals. Rarely, as in the college town of Alfred, New York, U.S. cable systems retransmitted Canadian channels.

Although early (VHF) television receivers could receive 12 channels (2–13), the maximum number of channels that could be broadcast in one city was 7: channels 2, 4, either 5 or 6, 7, 9, 11 and 13, as receivers at the time were unable to receive strong (local) signals on adjacent channels without distortion. (There were frequency gaps between 4 and 5, and between 6 and 7, which allowed both to be used in the same city).

As equipment improved, all twelve channels could be utilized, except where a local VHF television station broadcast. Local broadcast channels were not usable for signals deemed to be a priority, but technology allowed low-priority signals to be placed on such channels by synchronizing their blanking intervals. TVs were unable to reconcile these blanking intervals and the slight changes due to travel through a medium, causing ghosting. The bandwidth of the amplifiers also was limited, meaning frequencies over 250 MHz were difficult to transmit to distant portions of the coaxial network, and UHF channels could not be used at all. To expand beyond 12 channels, non-standard "midband" channels had to be used, located between the FM band and Channel 7, or "superband" beyond Channel 13 up to about 300 MHz; these channels initially were only accessible using separate tuner boxes that sent the chosen channel into the TV set on Channel 2, 3 or 4.[citation needed] Initially, UHF broadcast stations were at a disadvantage because the standard TV sets in use at the time were unable to receive their channels. With the passage of the All-Channel Receiver Act in 1964, all new television sets were required to include a UHF tuner, nonetheless, it would still take a few years for UHF stations to become competitive.

Before being added to the cable box itself, these midband channels were used for early incarnations of pay TV, e.g. The Z Channel (Los Angeles) and HBO but transmitted in the clear i.e. not scrambled as standard TV sets of the period could not pick up the signal nor could the average consumer de-tune the normal stations to be able to receive it.

Once tuners that could receive select mid-band and super-band channels began to be incorporated into standard television sets, broadcasters were forced to either install scrambling circuitry or move these signals further out of the range of reception for early cable-ready TVs and VCRs. However, once consumer sets had the ability to receive all 181 FCC allocated channels, premium broadcasters were left with no choice but to scramble.

Unfortunately for pay-TV operators, the descrambling circuitry was often published in electronics hobby magazines such as Popular Science and Popular Electronics allowing anybody with anything more than a rudimentary knowledge of broadcast electronics to be able to build their own and receive the programming without cost.

Later, the cable operators began to carry FM radio stations, and encouraged subscribers to connect their FM stereo sets to cable. Before stereo and bilingual TV sound became common, Pay-TV channel sound was added to the FM stereo cable line-ups. About this time, operators expanded beyond the 12-channel dial to use the "midband" and "superband" VHF channels adjacent to the "high band" 7–13 of North American television frequencies. Some operators as in Cornwall, Ontario, used a dual distribution network with Channels 2–13 on each of the two cables.

During the 1980s, United States regulations not unlike public, educational, and government access (PEG) created the beginning of cable-originated live television programming. As cable penetration increased, numerous cable-only TV stations were launched, many with their own news bureaus that could provide more immediate and more localized content than that provided by the nearest network newscast.

Such stations may use similar on-air branding as that used by the nearby broadcast network affiliate, but the fact that these stations do not broadcast over the air and are not regulated by the FCC, their call signs are meaningless. These stations evolved partially into today's over-the-air digital subchannels, where a main broadcast TV station e.g. NBS 37* would – in the case of no local CNB or ABS station being available – rebroadcast the programming from a nearby affiliate but fill in with its own news and other community programming to suit its own locale. Many live local programs with local interests were subsequently created all over the United States in most major television markets in the early 1980s.

This evolved into today's many cable-only broadcasts of diverse programming, including cable-only produced television movies and miniseries. Cable specialty channels, starting with channels oriented to show movies and large sporting or performance events, diversified further, and "narrowcasting" became common. By the late 1980s, cable-only signals outnumbered broadcast signals on cable systems, some of which by this time had expanded beyond 35 channels. By the mid-1980s in Canada, cable operators were allowed by the regulators to enter into distribution contracts with cable networks on their own.

By the 1990s, tiers became common, with customers able to subscribe to different tiers to obtain different selections of additional channels above the basic selection. By subscribing to additional tiers, customers could get specialty channels, movie channels, and foreign channels. Large cable companies used addressable descramblers to limit access to premium channels for customers not subscribing to higher tiers, however the above magazines often published workarounds for that technology as well.

During the 1990s, the pressure to accommodate the growing array of offerings resulted in digital transmission that made more efficient use of the VHF signal capacity; fibre optics was common to carry signals into areas near the home, where coax could carry higher frequencies over the short remaining distance. Although for a time in the 1980s and 1990s, television receivers and VCRs were equipped to receive the mid-band and super-band channels. Due to the fact that the descrambling circuitry was for a time present in these tuners, depriving the cable operator of much of their revenue, such cable-ready tuners are rarely used now – requiring a return to the set-top boxes used from the 1970s onward.

The conversion to digital broadcasting has put all signals – broadcast and cable – into digital form, rendering analog cable television service mostly obsolete, functional in an ever-dwindling supply of select markets. Analog television sets are still[when?] accommodated, but their tuners are mostly obsolete, oftentimes dependent entirely on the set-top box.

Deployments by continent

Cable television is mostly available in North America, Europe, Australia, South Asia, East Asia and South America, and less so in the Middle East. Cable television has had little success in Africa, as it is not cost-effective to lay cables in sparsely populated areas. So-called "Wireless Cable" microwave-based systems are used instead.

Other cable-based services

Coaxial cables are capable of bi-directional carriage of signals as well as the transmission of large amounts of data. Cable television signals use only a portion of the bandwidth available over coaxial lines. This leaves plenty of space available for other digital services such as cable internet, cable telephony and wireless services, using both unlicensed and licensed spectrum. Broadband internet access is achieved over coaxial cable by using cable modems to convert the network data into a type of digital signal that can be transferred over coaxial cable. One problem with some cable systems is the older amplifiers placed along the cable routes are unidirectional thus in order to allow for uploading of data the customer would need to use an analog telephone modem to provide for the upstream connection. This limited the upstream speed to 31.2 Kbp/s and prevented the always-on convenience broadband internet typically provides. Many large cable systems have upgraded or are upgrading their equipment to allow for bi-directional signals, thus allowing for greater upload speed and always-on convenience, though these upgrades are expensive.

In North America, Australia and Europe, many cable operators have already introduced cable telephone service, which operates just like existing fixed line operators. This service involves installing a special telephone interface at the customer's premises that converts the analog signals from the customer's in-home wiring into a digital signal, which is then sent on the local loop (replacing the analog last mile, or plain old telephone service (POTS) to the company's switching center, where it is connected to the public switched telephone network (PSTN). The biggest obstacle to cable telephone service is the need for nearly 100% reliable service for emergency calls. One of the standards available for digital cable telephony, PacketCable, seems to be the most promising and able to work with the quality of service (QOS) demands of traditional analog plain old telephone service (POTS) service. The biggest advantage to digital cable telephone service is similar to the advantage of digital cable, namely that data can be compressed, resulting in much less bandwidth used than a dedicated analog circuit-switched service. Other advantages include better voice quality and integration to a Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) network providing cheap or unlimited nationwide and international calling. In many cases, digital cable telephone service is separate from cable modem service being offered by many cable companies and does not rely on Internet Protocol (IP) traffic or the Internet.

Traditional cable television providers and traditional telecommunication companies increasingly compete in providing voice, video and data services to residences. The combination of television, telephone and Internet access is commonly called "triple play", regardless of whether CATV or telcos offer it.

See also

References

  1. ^ Coopersmith, Jonathan (1998). "Pornography, Technology and Progress". Icon. 4: 94–125. JSTOR 23785961.
  2. ^ Tynan, Dan (23 May 2007). "New Choices Coming for Cable TV Users". TechHive. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  3. ^ "ClearQAM – What It Is And Why It Matters". 18 February 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
  4. ^ "The Road to Cisco Infinite Broadband" (PDF). Cisco. 2017. (PDF) from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  5. ^ "History of Cable – CCTA". Retrieved 2021-11-12.

Further reading

  • The history of Rediffusion by Gerald K Clode
  • Eisenmann, Thomas R., "Cable TV: From Community Antennas to Wired Cities", Harvard Business School Weekly Newsletter, July 10, 2000
  • Moss, Mitchell L.; Payne, Frances, , New York Affairs, Volume 6, Number 4. New York University. 1981
  • Smith, Ralph Lee, "The Wired Nation", The Nation magazine, May 18, 1970
  • Smith, Ralph Lee, The Wired Nation; Cable TV: the electronic communications highway. New York, Harper & Row, 1972. ISBN 0-06-090243-4
  • Herrick, Dennis F. (2012). Media Management in the Age of Giants: Business Dynamics of Journalism. UNM Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-5163-0.

External links

cable, television, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, united, states, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, june, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, templa. The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cable television is a system of delivering television programming to consumers via radio frequency RF signals transmitted through coaxial cables or in more recent systems light pulses through fibre optic cables This contrasts with broadcast television also known as terrestrial television in which the television signal is transmitted over the air by radio waves and received by a television antenna attached to the television or satellite television in which the television signal is transmitted over the air by radio waves from a communications satellite orbiting the Earth and received by a satellite dish antenna on the roof FM radio programming high speed Internet telephone services and similar non television services may also be provided through these cables Analog television was standard in the 20th century but since the 2000s cable systems have been upgraded to digital cable operation A coaxial cable used to carry cable television onto subscribers premises A set top box an electronic device which cable subscribers use to connect the cable signal to their television sets Presented unit is a Cisco RNG200N for QAM digital cable television system used in North America A cable channel sometimes known as a cable network is a television network available via cable television When available through satellite television including direct broadcast satellite providers such as DirecTV or Dish Network as well as via IPTV providers such as Verizon FIOS and U verse TV this is referred to as a satellite channel Alternative terms include non broadcast channel or programming service the latter being mainly used in legal contexts The abbreviation CATV is used in the US for cable television and originally stood for community antenna television from cable television s origins in 1948 in areas where over the air TV reception was limited by distance from transmitters or mountainous terrain large community antennas were constructed and cable was run from them to individual homes In 1968 6 4 of Americans had cable television The number increased to 7 5 in 1978 By 1988 52 8 of all households were using cable The number further increased to 62 4 in 1994 1 Contents 1 Distribution 2 Principle of operation 2 1 Hybrid fiber coaxial 3 History in North America 4 Deployments by continent 5 Other cable based services 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDistribution Edit A cable television distribution box left in the basement of a building in Germany Kabel BW network now Vodafone with a splitter right which supplies the signal to separate cables which go to different rooms To receive cable television at a given location cable distribution lines must be available on the local utility poles or underground utility lines Coaxial cable brings the signal to the customer s building through a service drop an overhead or underground cable If the subscriber s building does not have a cable service drop the cable company will install one The standard cable used in the U S is RG 6 which has a 75 ohm impedance and connects with a type F connector The cable company s portion of the wiring usually ends at a distribution box on the building exterior and built in cable wiring in the walls usually distributes the signal to jacks in different rooms to which televisions are connected Multiple cables to different rooms are split off the incoming cable with a small device called a splitter There are two standards for cable television older analog cable and newer digital cable which can carry data signals used by digital television receivers such as high definition television HDTV equipment All cable companies in the United States have switched to or are in the course of switching to digital cable television since it was first introduced in the late 1990s Most cable companies require a set top box cable converter box or a slot on one s TV set for conditional access module cards 2 to view their cable channels even on newer televisions with digital cable QAM tuners because most digital cable channels are now encrypted or scrambled to reduce cable service theft A cable from the jack in the wall is attached to the input of the box and an output cable from the box is attached to the television usually the RF IN or composite input on older TVs Since the set top box only decodes the single channel that is being watched each television in the house requires a separate box Some unencrypted channels usually traditional over the air broadcast networks can be displayed without a receiver box 3 The cable company will provide set top boxes based on the level of service a customer purchases from basic set top boxes with a standard definition picture connected through the standard coaxial connection on the TV to high definition wireless digital video recorder DVR receivers connected via HDMI or component Older analog television sets are cable ready and can receive the old analog cable without a set top box To receive digital cable channels on an analog television set even unencrypted ones requires a different type of box a digital television adapter supplied by the cable company or purchased by the subscriber Another new distribution method that takes advantage of the low cost high quality DVB distribution to residential areas uses TV gateways to convert the DVB C DVB C2 stream to IP for distribution of TV over IP network in the home Many cable companies offer internet access through DOCSIS 4 Principle of operation Edit Diagram of a modern hybrid fiber coaxial cable television system At the regional headend the TV channels are sent multiplexed on a light beam which travels through optical fiber trunklines which fan out from distribution hubs to optical nodes in local communities Here the light signal from the fiber is translated to a radio frequency electrical signal which is distributed through coaxial cable to individual subscriber homes In the most common system multiple television channels as many as 500 although this varies depending on the provider s available channel capacity are distributed to subscriber residences through a coaxial cable which comes from a trunkline supported on utility poles originating at the cable company s local distribution facility called the headend Many channels can be transmitted through one coaxial cable by a technique called frequency division multiplexing At the headend each television channel is translated to a different frequency By giving each channel a different frequency slot on the cable the separate television signals do not interfere with each other At an outdoor cable box on the subscriber s residence the company s service drop cable is connected to cables distributing the signal to different rooms in the building At each television the subscriber s television or a set top box provided by the cable company translates the desired channel back to its original frequency baseband and it is displayed onscreen Due to widespread cable theft in earlier analog systems the signals are typically encrypted on modern digital cable systems and the set top box must be activated by an activation code sent by the cable company before it will function which is only sent after the subscriber signs up If the subscriber fails to pay their bill the cable company can send a signal to deactivate the subscriber s box preventing reception There are also usually upstream channels on the cable to send data from the customer box to the cable headend for advanced features such as requesting pay per view shows or movies cable internet access and cable telephone service The downstream channels occupy a band of frequencies from approximately 50 MHz to 1 GHz while the upstream channels occupy frequencies of 5 to 42 MHz Subscribers pay with a monthly fee Subscribers can choose from several levels of service with premium packages including more channels but costing a higher rate At the local headend the feed signals from the individual television channels are received by dish antennas from communication satellites Additional local channels such as local broadcast television stations educational channels from local colleges and community access channels devoted to local governments PEG channels are usually included on the cable service Commercial advertisements for local business are also inserted in the programming at the headend the individual channels which are distributed nationally also have their own nationally oriented commercials Hybrid fiber coaxial Edit Main article Hybrid fibre coaxial Modern cable systems are large with a single network and headend often serving an entire metropolitan area Most systems use hybrid fiber coaxial HFC distribution this means the trunklines that carry the signal from the headend to local neighborhoods are optical fiber to provide greater bandwidth and also extra capacity for future expansion At the headend the electrical signal is translated into an optical signal and sent through the fiber The fiber trunkline goes to several distribution hubs from which multiple fibers fan out to carry the signal to boxes called optical nodes in local communities At the optical node the optical signal is translated back into an electrical signal and carried by coaxial cable distribution lines on utility poles from which cables branch out to a series of signal amplifiers and line extenders These devices carry the signal to customers via passive RF devices called taps History in North America EditFurther information Cable television in the United States Cable television 5 began in the United States as a commercial business in 1950 although there were small scale systems by hobbyists in the 1940s The early systems simply received weak broadcast channels amplified them and sent them over unshielded wires to the subscribers limited to a community or to adjacent communities The receiving antenna would be taller than any individual subscriber could afford thus bringing in stronger signals in hilly or mountainous terrain it would be placed at a high elevation At the outset cable systems only served smaller communities without television stations of their own and which could not easily receive signals from stations in cities because of distance or hilly terrain In Canada however communities with their own signals were fertile cable markets as viewers wanted to receive American signals Rarely as in the college town of Alfred New York U S cable systems retransmitted Canadian channels Although early VHF television receivers could receive 12 channels 2 13 the maximum number of channels that could be broadcast in one city was 7 channels 2 4 either 5 or 6 7 9 11 and 13 as receivers at the time were unable to receive strong local signals on adjacent channels without distortion There were frequency gaps between 4 and 5 and between 6 and 7 which allowed both to be used in the same city As equipment improved all twelve channels could be utilized except where a local VHF television station broadcast Local broadcast channels were not usable for signals deemed to be a priority but technology allowed low priority signals to be placed on such channels by synchronizing their blanking intervals TVs were unable to reconcile these blanking intervals and the slight changes due to travel through a medium causing ghosting The bandwidth of the amplifiers also was limited meaning frequencies over 250 MHz were difficult to transmit to distant portions of the coaxial network and UHF channels could not be used at all To expand beyond 12 channels non standard midband channels had to be used located between the FM band and Channel 7 or superband beyond Channel 13 up to about 300 MHz these channels initially were only accessible using separate tuner boxes that sent the chosen channel into the TV set on Channel 2 3 or 4 citation needed Initially UHF broadcast stations were at a disadvantage because the standard TV sets in use at the time were unable to receive their channels With the passage of the All Channel Receiver Act in 1964 all new television sets were required to include a UHF tuner nonetheless it would still take a few years for UHF stations to become competitive Before being added to the cable box itself these midband channels were used for early incarnations of pay TV e g The Z Channel Los Angeles and HBO but transmitted in the clear i e not scrambled as standard TV sets of the period could not pick up the signal nor could the average consumer de tune the normal stations to be able to receive it Once tuners that could receive select mid band and super band channels began to be incorporated into standard television sets broadcasters were forced to either install scrambling circuitry or move these signals further out of the range of reception for early cable ready TVs and VCRs However once consumer sets had the ability to receive all 181 FCC allocated channels premium broadcasters were left with no choice but to scramble Unfortunately for pay TV operators the descrambling circuitry was often published in electronics hobby magazines such as Popular Science and Popular Electronics allowing anybody with anything more than a rudimentary knowledge of broadcast electronics to be able to build their own and receive the programming without cost Later the cable operators began to carry FM radio stations and encouraged subscribers to connect their FM stereo sets to cable Before stereo and bilingual TV sound became common Pay TV channel sound was added to the FM stereo cable line ups About this time operators expanded beyond the 12 channel dial to use the midband and superband VHF channels adjacent to the high band 7 13 of North American television frequencies Some operators as in Cornwall Ontario used a dual distribution network with Channels 2 13 on each of the two cables During the 1980s United States regulations not unlike public educational and government access PEG created the beginning of cable originated live television programming As cable penetration increased numerous cable only TV stations were launched many with their own news bureaus that could provide more immediate and more localized content than that provided by the nearest network newscast Such stations may use similar on air branding as that used by the nearby broadcast network affiliate but the fact that these stations do not broadcast over the air and are not regulated by the FCC their call signs are meaningless These stations evolved partially into today s over the air digital subchannels where a main broadcast TV station e g NBS 37 would in the case of no local CNB or ABS station being available rebroadcast the programming from a nearby affiliate but fill in with its own news and other community programming to suit its own locale Many live local programs with local interests were subsequently created all over the United States in most major television markets in the early 1980s This evolved into today s many cable only broadcasts of diverse programming including cable only produced television movies and miniseries Cable specialty channels starting with channels oriented to show movies and large sporting or performance events diversified further and narrowcasting became common By the late 1980s cable only signals outnumbered broadcast signals on cable systems some of which by this time had expanded beyond 35 channels By the mid 1980s in Canada cable operators were allowed by the regulators to enter into distribution contracts with cable networks on their own By the 1990s tiers became common with customers able to subscribe to different tiers to obtain different selections of additional channels above the basic selection By subscribing to additional tiers customers could get specialty channels movie channels and foreign channels Large cable companies used addressable descramblers to limit access to premium channels for customers not subscribing to higher tiers however the above magazines often published workarounds for that technology as well During the 1990s the pressure to accommodate the growing array of offerings resulted in digital transmission that made more efficient use of the VHF signal capacity fibre optics was common to carry signals into areas near the home where coax could carry higher frequencies over the short remaining distance Although for a time in the 1980s and 1990s television receivers and VCRs were equipped to receive the mid band and super band channels Due to the fact that the descrambling circuitry was for a time present in these tuners depriving the cable operator of much of their revenue such cable ready tuners are rarely used now requiring a return to the set top boxes used from the 1970s onward The conversion to digital broadcasting has put all signals broadcast and cable into digital form rendering analog cable television service mostly obsolete functional in an ever dwindling supply of select markets Analog television sets are still when accommodated but their tuners are mostly obsolete oftentimes dependent entirely on the set top box Deployments by continent EditMain article Cable television by region Cable television is mostly available in North America Europe Australia South Asia East Asia and South America and less so in the Middle East Cable television has had little success in Africa as it is not cost effective to lay cables in sparsely populated areas So called Wireless Cable microwave based systems are used instead Other cable based services EditCoaxial cables are capable of bi directional carriage of signals as well as the transmission of large amounts of data Cable television signals use only a portion of the bandwidth available over coaxial lines This leaves plenty of space available for other digital services such as cable internet cable telephony and wireless services using both unlicensed and licensed spectrum Broadband internet access is achieved over coaxial cable by using cable modems to convert the network data into a type of digital signal that can be transferred over coaxial cable One problem with some cable systems is the older amplifiers placed along the cable routes are unidirectional thus in order to allow for uploading of data the customer would need to use an analog telephone modem to provide for the upstream connection This limited the upstream speed to 31 2 Kbp s and prevented the always on convenience broadband internet typically provides Many large cable systems have upgraded or are upgrading their equipment to allow for bi directional signals thus allowing for greater upload speed and always on convenience though these upgrades are expensive In North America Australia and Europe many cable operators have already introduced cable telephone service which operates just like existing fixed line operators This service involves installing a special telephone interface at the customer s premises that converts the analog signals from the customer s in home wiring into a digital signal which is then sent on the local loop replacing the analog last mile or plain old telephone service POTS to the company s switching center where it is connected to the public switched telephone network PSTN The biggest obstacle to cable telephone service is the need for nearly 100 reliable service for emergency calls One of the standards available for digital cable telephony PacketCable seems to be the most promising and able to work with the quality of service QOS demands of traditional analog plain old telephone service POTS service The biggest advantage to digital cable telephone service is similar to the advantage of digital cable namely that data can be compressed resulting in much less bandwidth used than a dedicated analog circuit switched service Other advantages include better voice quality and integration to a Voice over Internet Protocol VoIP network providing cheap or unlimited nationwide and international calling In many cases digital cable telephone service is separate from cable modem service being offered by many cable companies and does not rely on Internet Protocol IP traffic or the Internet Traditional cable television providers and traditional telecommunication companies increasingly compete in providing voice video and data services to residences The combination of television telephone and Internet access is commonly called triple play regardless of whether CATV or telcos offer it See also EditAllVid CableCARD CCTV as closed circuit television not to be confused with CATV DOCSIS DVB C European cable television frequencies List of cable television companies Multichannel video programming distributor North American television frequencies Private cable operator QAM television Satellite television Switched video Tru2wayReferences Edit Coopersmith Jonathan 1998 Pornography Technology and Progress Icon 4 94 125 JSTOR 23785961 Tynan Dan 23 May 2007 New Choices Coming for Cable TV Users TechHive Retrieved 3 April 2019 ClearQAM What It Is And Why It Matters 18 February 2012 Retrieved 19 June 2015 The Road to Cisco Infinite Broadband PDF Cisco 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 28 February 2022 History of Cable CCTA Retrieved 2021 11 12 Further reading EditThe history of Rediffusion by Gerald K Clode Eisenmann Thomas R Cable TV From Community Antennas to Wired Cities Harvard Business School Weekly Newsletter July 10 2000 Moss Mitchell L Payne Frances Can Cable Keep Its Promise New York Affairs Volume 6 Number 4 New York University 1981 Smith Ralph Lee The Wired Nation The Nation magazine May 18 1970 Smith Ralph Lee The Wired Nation Cable TV the electronic communications highway New York Harper amp Row 1972 ISBN 0 06 090243 4 Herrick Dennis F 2012 Media Management in the Age of Giants Business Dynamics of Journalism UNM Press ISBN 978 0 8263 5163 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cable television Cable Television at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cable television amp oldid 1132980988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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