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Yes, the amplified antenna will sometimes make the TV set work where a unpowered will not.
No. There will be no analog signal to receive and process from the outdoor antenna. The only signal coming from the outdoor antenna will be digital. When the conversion is complete. You will need to hook up your antenna directly to the TV. Your conversion box will be worthless as far as analog to digital is concerned.
Not all antenna work indoors, but there are some available. An antenna should always be put outside where possible to avoid the walls of the building affecting the signal strength.
An indoor antenna that is plugged into a wall outlet is going to be best for receiving digital television when a tall building is in the way. There are also digital television antennas that work through the USB port on the computer.
There is a step by step tutorial for building a digital TV antenna out of wire at www.thetutorgenie.com/DigitalAntenna.html I have made 2 of them and they work great. Try this avs forum: http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=798265
What would give the impression that the director of a dramatic work does not have a clear idea of the grand vision is when the dramatized events are widely inter-spaced and incoherent.
All TVs including new ATSC Digital ones use the same frequencies as older NTSC Analog sets. An amplified antenna is recommended because there is a threshold where a weak analog signal will be visible (with considerable static) but a digital tuner will not have sufficient strength to display a digital (no noise or static) picture. Outdoor roof Antennas work great as well, you don't need an HDTV antenna, discount stores should have one for around $30.
Amplified antennas or antennas with amplifiers are usually the best choices for DTVs. The digital antennas RCA ANT751 and RCA ANT800 receive good reviews . The Channel Master digital antenna CM-3020 is also highly rated as good antenna.
You do not need to use a newer flat screen television to use a digital television antenna. They should work with older tv sets if you have a converter box.
If actors whose work you respect in other productions give exceedingly poor performances, then the director of a dramatic work might not have a clear idea of the grand vision. Also, this impression could be given when dramatized events are widely inter-spaced and incoherent.
Short answer: Yes!Longer answer: Digital TV and Analog TV share much in common; they are both radio signals, and in the same bands -- in fact the channel number assignments for the physical channels are identical. Your rooftop antenna picks up the radio signal no matter what is encoded on it. It is up to the receiver (your converter box, f'r'instance) to make sense of what comes from that antenna. Select a VHF/UHF type.
Yes. The DVD player does,'t usually go through the tuner. The "new digital TV" just means that it has a digital tuner. This won't affect things like DVD players that don't use the antenna input.