Time Warner Cable adds A&E HD, History Channel HD in Nebraska
For those who call Nebraska home, Time Warner Cable (partly owned by Time Warner, parent company of AOL, which owns Engadget) is giving you two more reasons to stay on the couch this New Year's Day. Reportedly, the operator has added A&E HD and History Channel HD to its digital lineup, but we've no idea if any others are slated to follow suit. Anyone else notice the newcomers? If so, drop your location in comments.[Thanks, Cody H.]






















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Shawn @ Jan 1st 2008 3:11AM
TWC in Raleigh NC had added a HD event channel with nothing on it today, which is what they often do before adding a new channel.
Joebnsd @ Jan 1st 2008 3:01PM
Looks like it's live here in San Diego also. Found it this morning when i was channel surfing for the repeat of the Pasadena Rose Parade in HD on Discovery. Already set my dvr for acouple shows. God I love my Moto Moxi box! :D
MegaZone @ Jan 1st 2008 10:51PM
Charter Digital in Worcester, MA (and I'd presume the surrounding area) seems to have recently added 734 A&EHD, 735 HISHD, and 742 MOJHD. I caught an add for MOJO HD on another channel, and found the others when I looked at the lineup.
TMS seems to still be missing them - Zap2it.com, TiVo, etc, all lack guide data for them.
Dnyce @ Jan 2nd 2008 12:46AM
Maybe I didn't notice it before but Nat Geo HD is now on in NYC.
Forrest @ Jan 2nd 2008 7:48AM
I have fiber Internet and TV service thru our local utility here in Jackson, TN and sometime in the last 3 or 4 days they added TLC HD, Animal Planet HD, Science Channel HD, A&E HD, History Channel HD, and the biggest shocker of all HDNET which I thought was only available if you had satellite.
jm130500 @ Jan 2nd 2008 9:42AM
Southeast Ohio still left in the dark...
Scott @ Jan 2nd 2008 2:06PM
Here in Albany, NY, TWC added some new HD channels about a week before xmas: The History Channel, National Geographic, Food Network, a few cruddy sports channels, CNN-HD, Animal Planet, and several others that I can't remember right now. And, for the most part, they suck. Worse still, some of them rarely have any HD programming, and others (like TBS) stretch some programs (Family Guy, for example) to 16:9, and it looks like crap.
The HDNet channel package is worth every penny, especially for the HD movies. It has really come a long way in the last few years...