I sure wish they would drop Big Ten Network around here, my understanding is that single channel costs $2 a month for all of us, and has very very worthless programming on it. There are a very few high dollar people that are rabid for it, the rest of us get to pay for watching football games by schools we don’t even know this time of year? Ridiculous.
Tv is in quite a bad spot right now.
Broadcasting over the air costs money.
If they can negotiate hard, even the local channels make some money being on cable or sat.
There is an incentive for them to just stop transmitting over the air, and go to subscription only.
Then throw in internet feeds, the wild new frontier of tv. The younger generations especially are turning to this, some are free, some are subscription, everything is jisjointed and not scheduled. Fairly easy to find more than you want for free watching to occupy your time.
Everyone wants more bandwidth for cell phone data, and so broadcast tv is losing. Ore and more space to broadcast in. They sell off the freed up space to sell to internet/ cell companies.
The writing is kind of on the wall, antenna broadcast tv is fading away.
The big players of major stations and major cable and sat companies are fighting over a smaller piece of pie to send more costly signals to.
We the viewers are just an asset to haggle over, we don’t really count for anything.
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Today's Featured Article - Oil Bath Air Filters - by Chris Pratt. Some of us grew up thinking that an air filter was a paper thing that allowed air to pass while trapping dirt particles of a particles of a certain size. What a surprise to open up your first old tractor's air filter case and find a can that appears to be filled with the scrap metal swept from around a machine shop metal lathe. To top that off, you have a cup with oil in it ("why would you want to lubricate your carburetor?"). On closer examination (and some reading in a AC D-14 service manual), I found out that this is a pretty ingenious method of cleaning the air in the tractor's intake tract.
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