Im hearing rumors that Directv will be shutting down either 101 or 119 satellites, or not sending SD programming to those satellites anymore. Does anyone know about this?
DIRECTV specific messages should be posted in the DIRECTV forum. This forum is for Satellite Guys forum support.Im hearing rumors that Directv will be shutting down either 101 or 119 satellites, or not sending SD programming to those satellites anymore. Does anyone know about this?
MPEG2 LOCALS are going away in April, not all MPEG2 channels.
At least that is what I have been told by DIRECTV.
They are phasing out MPEG2 locals on 101 & 119 spot beams over time starting in April. By the end of this year, Directv will no longer use the 110, 119 and 95 satellites, and 101 will be (mostly) converted to DVB-S2 and MPEG4. They will need to maintain at least two DSS transponders for HD receivers that have a DSS only network tuner, so it is possible there may still be some MPEG2 SD programming on those transponders. Everything else will be either MPEG4 SD or MPEG4 HD, and there will no longer be any "SD duplicates".
What is the plan?
Does this then free up lots of space for 4K channels in a few years?
Why are they doing this? Are they going 100% HD some day upconverting HD?
Ideas has to be a lot of man power to do this.
I did say 4K in a couple of years when it is out. Remember the old HD days, we had HBO and Discovery, then years later it all took off, now everyone is HD.
Could it be they are planning for years from now?
Why not just move them to HD?There are no 4K channels so there can be as much space for them as they want but there's nothing to put in that space. They are going 100% MPEG4 which is not 100% HD but it will eliminate seeing 206 ESPNHD then 206 ESPN (SD) in the guide because they will drop the unnecessary SD duplicates. Channels that are SD now (like Discovery Life or CSPAN) will still be SD but they will be MPEG4 SD instead of MPEG2 SD.
Does this mean no more sd channels? I use them in a pinch sometimes for a few minutes for football games during heavy rain.
In this day and age there is no reason for any channel not to be offered in HD. DirecTV is still far behind in their HD offerings from other providers.It means no mean SD duplicates, like myself and others said earlier. Channels that are not offered in HD will still be in SD, but in MPEG4 SD. So there will be ESPN HD only. HBO HD only. FS1 HD only. CNN HD only. But there CSPAN, for example, will still be SD (at least to start) but will be in the MPEG 4 format that only a few SD channels are in now. Most SD is MPEG2 format now. That is what is going away this year, starting with locals in April.
In this day and age there is no reason for any channel not to be offered in HD. DirecTV is still far behind in their HD offerings from other providers.
Are you saying Directv is dumping their proprietary ku transmission code and switching to the standard International DVB-S2 format?