DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION

'Digital Terrestrial Television' ('DTTV' or 'DTT') is an implementation of digital technology to provide a greater number of channels and/or better quality of picture and sound using aerial broadcasts to a conventional antenna (or aerial) instead of a satellite dish or cable connection.
The technology used is ATSC in North America, ISDB-T in Japan, DVB-T in Europe and Australia,and DMB-T/H in China (including Hong Kong); the rest of the world remaining mostly undecided. ISDB-T is very similar to DVB-T and can share front-end receiver and demodulator components.

Contents
Transmission
Reception
DTT Around the world
Analogue to digital transition
See also
Notes
External links

Transmission


DTTV is transmitted on radio frequencies through the airwaves that are similar to standard analog television, with the primary difference being the use of multiplex transmitters to allow reception of multiple channels on a single frequency range (such as a UHF or VHF channel).
The amount of data that can be transmitted (and therefore the number of channels) is directly affected by the modulation method of the channel. The modulation method in DVB-T is COFDM with either 64 or 16 state Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM). In general a 64QAM channel is capable of transmitting a greater bitrate, but is more susceptible to interference. 16 and 64QAM constellations can be combined in a single multiplex, providing a controllable degradation for more important programme streams. This is called hierarchical modulation.
New developments in compression have resulted in the MPEG-4/AVC standard which will enable two high definition services to be coded into a 24 Mbit/s European terrestrial transmission channel.
The DVB-T standard is not used for terrestrial digital television in North America. Instead, the ATSC standard calls for 8VSB modulation, which has similar characteristics to the vestigial sideband modulation used for analogue television. This provides considerably more immunity to interference, but is not immune - as DVB-T is - to multipath distortion and also does not provide for single-frequency network operation (which is in any case not relevant in the United States).
Both systems use the MPEG-2 transport stream and video codec; they differ significantly in how related services (such as multichannel audio, captions, and program guides) are encoded.

Reception


DTTV is received via a digital set-top box, or integrated receiving device, that decodes the signal received via a standard aerial antenna. However, due to frequency planning issues, an aerial with a different group (usually a wideband) may be required if the DTTV multiplexes lie outside the bandwidth of the originally installed aerial. This is quite common in the UK, see external links.

DTT Around the world


''Main article: List of digital television deployments by country''
The United Kingdom (1998), Sweden(1999) and Spain(2000) were the first to launch DTT with platforms heavily reliant on pay television. All platforms experienced many starter problems, in particular the British and Spanish platforms which failed financially. Nevertheless Boxer, the Swedish pay platform which started in 2004, proved to be very successful.
DTT in the United Kingdom was launched in November 1998 as a primarily subscription service branded as ONdigital, a joint venture between Granada Television and Carlton Communications, with only a few channels being available free to air. ONdigital soon ran into financial difficulties with subscriber numbers below expectations, and in order to attempt to reverse their fortunes, it was decided that the ITV and ONdigtital brands should align, and the service was rebranded ITV Digital in 2001. Despite an expensive advertising campaign, ITV Digital struggled to attract sufficient new subscribers and in 2002 closed the service. After commercial failure of the Pay TV proposition it was relaunched as the free-to-air Freeview platform in 2002. Top Up TV, a ''lite'' pay DTT service, became available in 2004. Of all countries, British DTT has currently the highest penetration rate.
In Spain most multiplexes closed after the failure of Quiero TV, the country's original pay DTT platform. DTT was relaunched on 30 November 2005, with approximately 30 free-to-air national and autonomous region TV and radio services.
In Sweden, DTT was launched in 1999 solely as a paid service. Today (2007) there are 38 channels in 5 MUXs. 11 of those are free-to-air channels from a number of different networks. Switch-off of the analogue TV service started in September 2005 and will finish on 15 October 2007.
Finland launched DTT in 2001, and terminated analogue transmissions nationwide as the third country in the world on 1 September 2007. Finland has successfully launched a mixture of pay and free-to-air DTT services.
Germany launched a free-to-air platform region-by-region, starting in Berlin in November 2002. The analogue broadcasts are planned to cease soon after digital transmissions are started. Berlin became completely digital on 4 August 2003.
France's TNT (télévision numérique terrestre) offers 18 free and 11 pay channels. A 70% DTT penetration rate is expected by March 2007. Free-to-view satellite services offering the same DTT offer are also expected to be readied by the end of 2006.
Luxembourg launched DTT services in April 2006. The national service launched in June 2006. On 1 September 2006, Luxembourg became the first European country to transition completely to DTT.
The EU recommended in December 2005 that its Member States cease all analogue television transmissions by the year 2012. Some EU member states decided to complete the transition as early as 2007 (e.g. Finland), nevertheless two member states (unspecified in the announcement) have expressed concerns that they would not be able to switch due to technical limitations.
In the United States by no later than February 17, 2009, all U.S. television broadcasts will be exclusively digital, by order of the Federal Communications Commission, with legislation setting this deadline signed into law in early 2006.[1] Furthermore, starting March 1, 2007, new television sets that receive signals over-the-air, including pocket sized portable televisions, must include digital or HDTV tuners for digital broadcasts.[2] Currently, most U.S. broadcasters are beaming their signals in both analog and digital formats; a few are digital-only. Citing the bandwidth efficiency of digital TV, after the analog switch-off the FCC will auction off channels 52–59 (the lower half of the 700 MHz band) for other communications traffic[3], completing the reallocation of broadcast channels 52–69 that began in the late 1990s. The analog switch-off ruling, which so far has met little opposition from consumers or manufacturers, would render all non-digital televisions dark and obsolete within 2 years. The FCC has determined that an external tuning device can simply be added to non-digital televisions to lengthen their useful lifespan. (However, as of March 2007, external tuning devices are not widely available, are relatively expensive, and require bulky AC power supplies.) Currently, even the earliest televisions continue to work with present broadcast standards. This mandate was designed to help provide a painless transition to the new standards.
In Venezuela there are already being performed the test phases for implementing the protocol, which is foreseen to start usage between 2008-2009. It will coexist with analog standard television for some time, until fully deployment of the system on a nationwide level is accomplished.

Analogue to digital transition


The broadcasting of digital terrestrial transmissions has led to many countries planning to phase out existing analogue broadcasts. This table shows the launches of DTT and the closing down of analogue television in several countries.

★ Official launch: The official launch date of digital terrestrial television in the country, not the start for trial broadcasts.

★ Start of closedown: The date for the first major closedown of analogue transmitters.

★ End of closedown: The date when analogue television is definitely closed down.

★ System: Transmission system, e. g. DVB-T, ATSC or ISDB-T.

★ Interactive: System used for interactive services, such as MHP and MHEG-5.

★ Compression: Video compression standard used. Most systems use MPEG-2, but the more efficient H.264/MPEG-4 AVC has become increasingly popular among networks launching later on. Some countries use both MPEG-2 and H.264, for example the UK which uses MPEG-2 for standard content but MPEG-4 for some HD broadcasts.
Country
Official launch
Start of
closedown
End of
closedown
System
Interactive
Compression
References
Albania2005-08DVB-T
Andorra2007-09-25DVB-TMHP[2]
Australia2001-01-012010 - 2012 (planned)DVB-TMPEG-2
Austria2006-10-262007-03-05 [2]DVB-TMHP
Belgium2002/2003December 31 2008 (Flemish Community)2011 (Francophone Community)DVB-TNoMPEG-2
Brazil2007-12-032016-06-29ISDTV
Canada2011-08-31ATSC[2]
China2007-2008DMB-T/H
Croatia20072010DVB-T
Czech Republic20042007-082010-10DVB-TMHPMPEG-2
Denmark2006-03-312009-11-01DVB-TMHPMPEG-2, H.264
Estonia2006-12-152012-02 (planned)DVB-TH.264[2]
Faroe Islands2002-122002-12DVB-T
Finland2001-08-272007-09-01[8]2007-09-01DVB-TMHP (abandoned)MPEG-2[2]
France2005-03-312008-032011-11-30DVB-TMPEG-2, H.264
Germany2002-112003-082008 (planned)DVB-TMPEG-2
Hong Kong20072012DMB-T/H
Ireland1999 Trial 2006-2008 TrialDVB-TRCT abandonedMPEG-2, H.264
Italy2004-01-012010-01-01DVB-TMHP
Japan2003-12-012011-07-24 (planned)ISDB-T
Luxembourg2006-042006-09-012008/2009DVB-T
Malaysia2006-09 (trials)2015(testing)
Mexico2004-7-5 [1]2022-1-1ATSC[2]
Morocco2007-06-01DVB-T
Netherlands20032006-12-11DVB-T
New Zealand2008-052013 to 2017DVB-T
Norway2007-09 [2]2008-032009-12DVB-TH.264/MPEG-4 AVC
Philippines2006-10 (trials)/ 20072010 (planned)2015 (planned)DVB-T (testing)
Portugal2006-09 (technical trials)2010?2012?DVB-T
Romania2005-12-012012-12-31 (planned)DVB-T
Russia20122017DVB-T
Slovenia2007-0920102010DVB-TH.264/MPEG-4 AVC
South Africa2006-032008-11-012011-11-01DVB-TH.264/MPEG-4
South Korea20012011 (planned)ATSC
Spain2000-052008[12]2010-04-03DVB-TMHP
Sweden1999-04-01[2]2005-09-192007-10-15DVB-TMHPMPEG-2/H.264[14]
Switzerland20012002-032009-10DVB-T
Taiwan2006-0720082010DVB-T
Turkey2006-02 (trial services)DVB-T
United Kingdom1998-11-152007 (Whitehaven)2012DVB-TMHEG-5MPEG-2, H.264[2]
United States2009-02-17ATSCMPEG-2

See also



DVB-T (Digital Video Broadcasting - Terrestrial)

DVB (Digital Video Broadcasting)

Digital television (DTV)

List of digital television deployments by country

1seg

Notes


1. Section 3002 of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-171, 120 Stat. 4 (Feb. 8, 2006), amending the Communications Act of 1934, section 309(j)(14), codified at .
2.
3. FCC: Wireless Services: Lower 700 MHz
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. Digi-tv esillä ympäri maata
9.
10.
11.
12. Local channels
13.
14. As of June 2007, H.264 is only used for HDTV in the Mälaren Valley region.
15.

External links



Share help, tips and advice as Cumbria leads the way to digital tv in the UK

Complete list of UK DTT transmitters and any change of group (see Reception section of this page)

digitalUK - Official Switchover Information

DigiTAG

The DVB Project

Official DVB-H Information

European Audiovisual Observatory

Research about DTT

Open DVB-T Implementation (BSD license) with source code for Matlab and GNU Octave

DVB-T in the north of France

Official TNT site

Digital terrestrial television in Spain

Digital Broadcasting Device Manager

Worldwide overview of the digital terrestrial systems ATSC, DVB-T and ISDB-T

Digital TV & Radio Worldwide

TNT in France (French Digital TV)

Digital Terrestrial TV & Radio Worldwide

Latest Irish Waffle Here

Finland needs another 48 small relays to fill in coverage holes ( July 2007)

Mexican FCC

A blog about DTT receivers

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