May 31

Announcing the winner of the best ISP awardthe one that works for you and your family! Finding the best ISP is finding the one that works best for your internet experience and your needs. There is not an across the board best choice that will make every user satisfied. You need to choose an ISP that enables you and your family to use the internet in the ways and for the uses that you choose.

The best ISP will be one that offers software upgrades regularly and has been in business for a long time. The software upgrades will show you that they are constantly changing to give their users more features and speed. They will have a good track record with customers and their customer service associates will be available 24/7 with quick and efficient responses.

The number of email addresses available per account will help you decide which is the best ISP for you. If the number does not match or exceed the amount that you need for you and your family, then that ISP may not be the best choice for you and your family. Nothing is worse than your children fighting over an email address or reading each others emails.

If you have young children, then the best ISP choice for you may be one that offers the blocking of websites that are inappropriate for children. Some ISPs also offer special children’s offerings like games, cartoons, and movies. They also may offer links to homework help sites and other child appropriate sites.

The best ISP will be one that offers SPAM blocker and virus protection for your email and computer. This will protect your computer from any viruses that may be sent to you. SPAM blocker will help to save you time in reading your emails as it blocks many of those irritating emails that you do not want.

Unlimited internet usage is also the mark of one of the best ISPs. If you are on the computer several times daily, then this is the way that you want to go. Otherwise you could be paying extra money for any minutes over your specified time limit.

Price may be a factor in choosing the best ISP for you and your family, but keep in mind that you should not use price as the primary decision maker. Prices vary but so does service. The best ISP should be one that connects quickly and loads websites and information speedily. This may not happen with an ultra-cheap ISP. So choose the best ISP for you and your family to ensure that you receive the service that you need and deserve!

Learn the essential information for picking the right Internet Service Provider at Net Zero

May 29
Few Tips for Buying a Cable Descrambler
posted by: admin in Satellite TV on 05 29th, 2008 | | No Comments »

The first thing you should know is that cable descramblers come it two types: a single unit or a device with two units. The single unit device contains a converter and a descrambler that have been assembled jointly inside a single box. Nothing fancy so far and the unit is offering you the possibility of being easily installed and repaired. It comes in two models: one generic and one name brand model, depending on customers’ requests. This kind of cable descrambler has the advantage of being compatible to the systems used by the cable companies to service their networks.

On the other hand, the two-piece device comes into two separate systems – a converter and a cable descrambler which are interconnected and serve the same scope. This system has the advantage of making you pay less for every component compared to the single unit device. In case one of the units breaks down, you can repair or change it for a new one, without affecting the other component.

Cable TV companies use another type of cable descramblers, namely an addressable converter descrambler that can be effortlessly controlled by the cable company. This device is functioning on a simple scenario. The cable TV company is sending a coded message through its cable network. This coded message is reaching the device that every costumer has and the unit starts descrambling the premium or pay-per-view channels that the customer has previously paid for. This type of device is allowing the cable TV company to easily disconnect the costumers that are not paying the bill.

One thing that you should keep in mind when purchasing cable descramblers is the fact that they can not work anywhere. Cable descramblers are different from one cable network to another as cable TV companies use different scrambling systems of various brand name or model. Therefore you must purchase the exact type of cable descramblers that you cable TV company is using.

In case your cable descrambler is not working, the thing you should do is to contact your TV cable provider. It could be possible that your equipment is out-of-date and it may not meet the cable company requirements anymore.

And always stay away from bargain cable descramblers that are not being traded in specialized stores because you may end up spending you money for a good for nothing device.

Get your Digital Cable Filters or known as Digital Cable Descramblers from http://www.cableboxfilters.com. Every order comes with detailed, simple instructions.

May 27

In last week’s column, I argued the merits (or rather the lack thereof) of extending decency regulations to cable and satellite TV. This week, I’ll point out just how much of a quagmire this would actually be and how difficult it would be to implement, regardless of the merits.

Regulating cable and satellite TV would not be as clear-cut as it might seem on the surface. Remember, we are talking about the regulation of indecency which, unlike obscenity, is protected by the First Amendment. The complexities of such an undertaking are quite formidable, to say the least. There are several key issues that would have to be dealt with and overcome. Like they say, the devil is in the details.

For one thing, Congress would need to determine the scope of what is to be regulated. Would it be cable and satellite TV only or all forms of pay-TV?

If Congress sets out to regulate all forms of pay-TV, the term – “pay-TV” – would have to be legally defined. Besides satellite and cable, would it also include the new IPTV technology in which TV channels, programs, and movies are delivered to TV set-top boxes from the internet? Would internet video viewed on a computer also be included? Or would everything originating from the internet be automatically exempt?

Would wireless pay TV services also be included?

Would videos, whether rented or purchased, also be defined as a form of pay-TV? One could make a case for them being included because videos, both VHS and DVD, are ultimately played on a TV.

What about video delivered by cell phone? Couldn’t that also be considered a form of pay-TV?

Now, if Congress decides that the new regulations will only apply to cable and satellite TV, there are still problems. Would all channels on every cable and satellite TV system be regulated or would the regulations just apply to the so-called “basic” channels. Would the term, “all channels”, include pay-per-view and video-on-demand (VOD) programs and movies? If so, how would the safe-harbor hours be enforced with VOD, since the subscriber determines when the programs and movies play?

If only the basics are to be included, some definition would be have to be devised to determine the difference between a basic and a premium channel. Would any channel that could be purchased as part of a package of channels be defined as a basic channel? If so, then most channels we currently think of as premiums would be included because they can be packaged together with similar channels. For example, HBO is sometimes packaged with channels like Cinemax, Showtime, Starz, or even other multiplexes of HBO.

Or would basics be limited those channels available in the first tier or two? Since this packaging varies from one cable and satellite system to the next, how would anyone know which channels are the real basics? Would premiums be limited to channels that could be subscribed to individually at an additional price? If that’s the case, would a multiplex channel like HBO Signature will treated like a basic, since it cannot be subscribed to individually? Also, the channels that one can subscribe to individually vary slightly from one cable and satellite system to the next, so how would anyone know which channels are the real premiums? When things like that differ from one cable and satellite system to another, would the rules be based on how the majority of the systems operate? Or would some other method be used to resolve this matter?

Perhaps the presence or absence of commercials could be used to separate the basics from the premiums. Under that system, all channels that are advertiser-supported would be considered basics and those that are not would be considered premiums. However, there are potential problems with this methodology as well. Congress would have to come up with a definition for advertiser-supported. Would it be based on the amount of advertising a channel carries? If so, how much advertising would it have to carry to be legally considered advertiser-supported? Or perhaps it would be based on the amount of revenue a channel derives from advertising. If so, what would that threshold be?

Even the term, “advertising”, would have to be legally defined. Would product placement found in movies and TV shows be included in the advertising equation? What about promos run for shows on related channels? Would those count as ads?

Even when all of that is sorted out, this methodology still leaves us with the problem presented by channels like Turner Classic Movies, Fox Movie Channel, and the Independent Film Channel, which don’t carry commercials but are included in many basic packages.

Now, assuming that all of the issues surrounding the scope of the new regulations could be worked out, the penalty issues would then have to be resolved. Who would pay the fines? Channel owners? Cable and satellite operators? Performers? All of them?

If internet audio and video are included in the scope of the regulations, would internet service providers and/or IPTV operators also have to pay?

If cable and satellite operators have to pay, couldn’t large fines potentially limit some smaller cable companies’ ability to expand and implement new technology like high-definition channels?

Then there’s the issue of license revocation. Cable and satellite channels don’t have licenses like broadcast channels. How could a habitual offender’s license be revoked if it doesn’t have license to begin with? Or would it just be put out of business? But wouldn’t that limit the channel choices available to cable and satellite customers?

Could cable and satellite operators be put out of business? Wouldn’t that leave people in some areas with no cable franchise? Wouldn’t it squash competition for cable service in areas that currently have it? Would the FCC actually shut down Directv and/or Dish Network and render thousands of backyard dishes worthless?

As you can see, there is a mountain of complicated questions that would have to be answered before the decency regulation of pay-TV could become a reality. Obviously, there would be lots of i’s to dot and t’s to cross. As this legislation is being considered, lawyers throughout the Capital area are already licking their chops!

Terry Mitchell is a software engineer, freelance writer, and trivia buff from Hopewell, VA. He also serves as a political columnist for American Daily and operates his own website – http://www.commenterry.com – on which he posts commentaries on various subjects such as politics, technology, religion, health and well-being, personal finance, and sports. His commentaries offer a unique point of view that is not often found in mainstream media.

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