OK then, it'll be a good idea to keep your receivers off the DCII datastream near the end then.
I think if all this gets indexed by search bots, Moto will pull those generics, and these boxes can hit the dumpster,
...unless y'all are gonna use 'em to sub to W5.
Anybody want a 920? ...Cheap?
Motorola does not care at this point in time.
They possibly could send out a new channel map at the end of the year that changes the generic sat icons in the receiver and leave that stream run for a month on the 2 satellites they currently use, (G0 & G1) after that the expense would not be justified and the map data stream turned completely off. They have stockholders to answer to so spending money to try to disable consumer receivers is not a justifiable cause for such expense.
One thing I would like to point out is that if you just turn off the 4d receiver and forget to turn off the automatic guide pickup, the receive will return to G1 automatically.
For those not wanting programming from W5 for their 4d receivers then parking it on a sat with no DCII signals on it would be best till the channel map data stream is completely turned off. This is barring any info Motorola will release before the end as to what their actual plans are.
They may decide to keep the mapping stream up there but I highly doubt it, so don't get your hopes up.
To those who want the W5 programing on their 4d receivers then be prepared to not have any generic sat icons in the receiver and only a token few icons will be there to use as a satellite locater. The icon names will be very old and it will become confusing even to use as a dish mover, (if you use it to slave a DVB receiver to it or a commercial DCII receiver).
The answer to this problem is to get a decent dish moving receiver and slave the 4d to it or to have a dedicated dish at W5 for the 4d and to use another receiver to move the bud for other things.
I agree with truckracer, that this is all just a short time thing. These 4d receivers will be obsolete in another 6+ years as many carriers will change their format either to dvb or to dc combo-mode.
This downfall did not just begin recently but it started when the consumer was no longer allowed to freely name the satellites out there and became dependent on some greedy company to make these changes for us all under the guise of making things easier.
If someone was able to figure out how to program the EIA port then it may allow the user to reprogram the satellite icons (even with their proper names). The reason it was not done till now was that GI/Motorola has said the front panel display could not display the extra letters or numbers.
They never said the receiver could not be programmed in with the correct satellite names.
Anyone attempting to do such testing should be aware that the current map stream sent out on G0 & G1 will interfere with any testing.
since none of this is a security breach no one at Motorola would care, the things done via the EIA port have nothing to do with any type of system security.
I believe the original 4play was also based on this and Motorola did not care about it. I have not talked to Rod about the 4play so I am not absolute on this. He used a commercial receiver to surf out dcII fta signals as I did, so I was not interested in the program.