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by Bo102010 5228 days ago
FWIW, basic cable isn't analog (well, some channels can be delivered in analog), so your points based on that line of thinking don't follow. It's typically not switched-digital because the basic services (such as the major broadcasters) are heavily watched, so there's not much benefit to going to switched-digital.
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Ok. But here, basic cable is still analog -- as my nice but rather old Panasonic 27" can attest.

My parents had extended basic. My father's understanding was that Comcast's mandate that they switch to a free, deck-of-cards sized set top box, and/or rent a Comcast DVR, meant in part that the digital signals being delivered are switched. Perhaps that's switched for smaller viewer share, and multicast for those channels with heavy viewership -- that's what I understand you to be saying.

This week's been my week to repeatedly reveal myself for the fool I am. So, I might as well make a thorough job of it in this thread.

P.S. As I recall, his thinking was in part that to keep the "deck of cards" transceiver small, power efficient, and cost effective enough, it must be receiving a single switched signal rather than trying to handle multiple signals. But perhaps it is picking amongst multiple signals, but only handling one of then at a time. (So, e.g. not producing multiple outputs that would enable a old Tivo to keep working.)

Sorry if this subthread is going on too long.

P.S. Thanks again for the explanations/clarifications.

Glad to help inform!

It's generally accurate to say that basic cable isn't _switched_ digital, which isn't the same as saying it's analog.

It's not accurate to say that basic cable is analog - that is, a single channel can fit into a 6 MHz space. Some providers may put their whole basic lineup in analog, but this is decidedly not a technical requirement.

There's a difference between the little Comcast DTA (for receiving clear QAM digital signals that aren't switched) and a tuning adapter (for receiving digital signals that are switched).

For my company, some markets have no analog channels at all - basic cable services are delivered as clear QAM, and customers use a QAM TV, a DTA, or set-top box to receive them.

Other markets have some analog channels and some digital channels as part of basic cable - if you have an analog TV, you can only see the analog ones, unless you have a DTA.