Go to the "set up menu" and click on SCAN DIGITAL CHANNELS.
No. They have digital channels and may pick up analogue channels but there are no digital channels.
Only Satellite Channels. Terrestrial Channels are only analogue.
Yes.
Go into your user's menu and select the channel search function. It should allow you to search both analog and digital channels providing it has a digital tuner.
Depends on what services are being delivered: * Digital cable phone? * Digital cable internet? * Digital cable television? * Expanded TV channels or premium channels? Mine is about $125 per month and includes 20MB download, 2.0MB upload, digital phone with loads of options, and digital television with extended channels, one movie tier and a hundred or so commercial free radio stations. The cost would be about the same whether in an apartment or a house. Some rental properties include the very basic TV channels and nothing more.
Sky digibox is a digital form or set top television box that specialises in Sky news and sky channels through HQ and digital TV while also servicing other channels.
Hi, If you can go to your user's menu on the TV and do a search for digital channels (as compared to analog channels) then you have an ATSC tuner. Cubby
The TVs without a converter box or digital signal will only be able to pick up analog channels, so once they change all of the channels to digital, the TV cannot pick up any channels, most likely resulting in snow.
To tune into HD channels there a a variety of methods available to consumers. These include a digital set top box, a digital antenna, a satellite receiver or a QAM tuner built into the television.
You can find a list of actual digital TV channels in your area by contacting a locals newsstand or even a community center. Your local library may also have some information on digital channels in your area.
No if you have a built-in digital tuner insisde your living room TV set, you will only receive the local CBS, ABC, NBC, PBS, and FOX affiliate digital television stations.
It depends on the set you are watching on and your cable service. If you have a cable service that sends in all channels, digital and analog, without the need for a set top box, then you can get all the channels available if your DVR and television both have digital tuners built into them. If your DVR does not have a digital tuner, it will only be able to pick up the standard channels and not the "virtual" channels available through digital service (i.e. 8.1 or 17.4, etc.). If the DVR does have a digital tuner, but you are still watching on an old analog CRT television set, then you won't be able to watch the virtual channels while the DVR is recording, since the old TV won't pick up those in between channels. So, the answer is, if you have a set with a digital tuner, and a DVR with a digital tuner, you will be able to watch any channel while recording any other channel, as long as they are not encoded. If one of the two does not have a digital tuner, then your watching selection will be limited to what it can pick up.