Logo Rob Buckley – Freelance Journalist and Editor

Digital TV: Choice or Cobblers?

Digital TV: Choice or Cobblers?

Digital TV is coming, but it is any better than what we have already?

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Those pictures are getting on for the same quality as DVD pictures because they're made in the exactly the same way. So they're a lot clearer than standard pictures. Except when the wind blows your satellite dish. Or a train goes past. Or an ant hiccoughs in a field two miles from your house. So other than in those circumstances, you should be expecting a blinding picture.

Basically, digital TV gives you better sound and pictures (most of the time) for about a tenner a month (yes, you have to pay).

Bargain, huh?

But the fun doesn't start there. Oh no.

You get extra channels, filled with high-quality programming like Pok?ɬ�mon (a cartoon series that teaches small impressionable children to catch wild animals and train them to fight one another), Temptation Island (in which moronic American couples are dumped on an island and separated, so equally stupid, greedy, genetically-under-equipped singles can attempt to seduce them in the privacy only national television can offer) and even Global Prickly Heat, international Ibiza beach games for those who find Big Break too intellectually stimulating and one of the few programmes in living memory in which Julian Clary is the well-behaved member of the line-up.

And all that's just on Sky One.

Because whatever your predilections, there's bound to be a channel that suits you. Interested in documentaries but just can't be bothered with all those history ones? How about "Discovery Wings", dedicated to documentaries about aircraft? Or perhaps you just can't get enough of the 17,000 programmes dedicated to renovating your house, your flat, your cat litter tray, and the like, and need to have access to another channel which will fill in the 30-second gaps between those programmes with yet more of the same. In which, case UK Style is the channel for you.

Or maybe a doctor officially pronounced you brain-stem dead a couple of months ago and your festering corpse has decayed away, leaving just a foul-smelling putrescence that repulses all that is good and beautiful in the world. You should probably start subscribing to "Granada Men and Motors" right now.

On the other hand, there are the delights of UK Drama, UK Gold, Paramount Comedy and Granada Plus, channels that have realised that showing repeats of the best stuff from British and American television from the last few decades is not only the best way to show things people might want to watch, but it's also dead cheap. If you've actually stopped watching television these days, because you've found you can't live with the nausea any more, you could just find the whole experience bearable again by subscribing to those channels. And Sky One, E4 and Paramount's other great selling point is they have the rights to show the five or six good programmes currently being made before anyone can see them on analogue television, if at all. These programmes are like gold dust: treasure them for we know not how much longer they will go on for.

So how do you get digital television? There are three ways.

  1. Get Sky Digital
    If the thought of sticking a two-foot diameter circle to the side of your lovingly stone-clad council house doesn't bother you (and history has shown us it probably won't), Sky Digital is the way to go. With approximately as many channels as there are Jeffrey Archer lies, Sky has something for every couch potato. And as long as there's no bad weather, a good picture is virtually guaranteed. It also has an online shopping system, so you can buy overpriced tatt using your remote control, thus bypassing even the minimal effort needed to order over the phone using a catalogue. Sign up down your local TV shop and in time, you'll find yourself owning more high-quality items of "Cubic Zirconium" jewellery than you ever thought possible.
  2. OnDigital
    OnDigital's main selling point is that you can use your current TV antenna for its service and don't need a satellite dish. You can also buy it from supermarkets. Its one drawback is that if you misalign your antenna by so much as a millimetre, your picture will be reduced to a single, flashing red dot. Which is pants.
    You also don't get as many channels as with Sky Digital and Sky One has slightly different programmes (bad luck all you Xena: Warrior Princess fans with OnDigital: you'll just have to sign up for the Playboy channel instead).
  3. Cable
    Brilliant picture quality. High-speed internet access through your television set. What more could you ask for? Well how about customer service, not destroying the entire street or your house to come and lay the cable and the ability to get it in areas of London other than Kensington and Chelsea?

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