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by jessaustin
4412 days ago
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The "virtually no threat of interference" claim needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Digital TV receivers are pretty dumb devices that aren't very good at rejecting interference. When I enter "Los Angeles CA" on the FCC reception map site [0], there are 23 green/strong broadcasters listed. When I enter the location of my home, there are two. Are we to believe devices that can handle the presence of 22 "competing" signals in one situation will be completely overwhelmed by the presence of one or two extra signals in the other situation? [0] http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/engineering/dtvmaps/ |
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One of the most complex aspects of doing this sort of thing is various permutations of the "hidden node" problem. Essentially, the problem is that a "smart" transmitter may not hear a dumb one, and use an in-use channel, interfering with a dumb receiver, which otherwise could hear the dumb transmitter. This tends to happen because geographic obstacles can cause individual nodes to have a different view of the spectrum environment.