
Sadly, we don't have any reason to believe that this is some nasty April Fool's prank. We heard right around this time last year that Rogers Cable was looking to
pull a Shaw and
compress its HD signals even further, and now, it seems that said smashing has begun. According to
Digital Home, a "majority of all Rogers high definition channels measured are now being compressed." Investigation in the matter has found that around 60 percent of Rogers' HD channels in Toronto were compressed, with HBO, The Movie Network, MPix, Nat Geo, CBS West, ABC West, Fox West, NBC West and PBS suffering the most. We're told that those stations saw typical bitrates of around 10Mbps to 13Mbps, while Rogers SportsNet, CityTV, CBC, CTV, Global and Discovery HD saw streams between 16Mbps and 18Mbps. Any locals care to confirm / deny?
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
omar @ Apr 1st 2009 10:57PM
so is the main way cable compaines compress signals is just to significantly lower the bit rate? is it all about the bit rate?
THJ @ Apr 1st 2009 11:17PM
Yes. The lower the bitrate, the more HD channels they can squeeze down the pipe. If you have a 10 Mb pipe and each of your channels take up 1Mb, then you can only have 10 channels. If each channel only takes up .5Mb, then you can have 20. (I made up these numbers, but the concept is established, afaik).
Omar @ Apr 1st 2009 11:34PM
for cable and HD telecasting, what bit rates are considered to be minimum acceptable quality for HD video... i would like some consensus numbers in order to compare how much compressed do cable companies actually do.
cwnyc @ Apr 1st 2009 11:52PM
Yes, by compressing bit rate they can still offer more channels at HD resolution so the advertising looks better... The lower the bit rate, the lower quality of processing for each pixel on the screen... So you end up with up to 2 million terrible looking dots per frame on the screen but it can still be advertised as "1080P!" This is no different from many streaming HD services available today.
By the way, Bluray offers 40 Mbps bit rate and I think standard definition DVDs are like 12 Mbps...
cwnyc @ Apr 2nd 2009 12:00AM
My bad.. DVDs are only 8 Mbps...
Here is a list of bit rate compression for different formats, streaming services, and broadcasting/cable/satellite services:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ou/?p=962&tag=rbxccnbzd1
Another more in depth look at bit rate and compression schemes:http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ou/?p=511
And:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ou/?p=959
Take a look..
Omar @ Apr 2nd 2009 12:00AM
So comparing cable versus, satellite and FIOS tv for high def channels. is it a huge noticeable difference in the PQ? when it comes to HDTV ive only dealt with Cable (cablevision) and have always been very disappointing in the PQ.