Learning a lot from this series, I am (progressing towards, was) totally ignorant of how TV worked. Thanks for making these videos. You are going to make me hammer my bank balance for some toys, ah, I mean tools, to look into all this!
Thank you CWNE88. I have been searching for this information to no avail. You are explaining everything I want to understand. Keep up the great work. I say work, because it takes a lot of research, testing and understanding everything so you can share your knowledge to others.
Thanks mate. 10 years ago when I was first playing with digital tv stuff, I had to compile various things to get it to play h.264 from DVB-T in Europe. It seems so easy now.
Again a question: Are all digital channels in Australia free to watch or do you need for some also an extra contract? If yes, how do you work with that?
Well first and foremost, I don't watch TV. Secondly, yes there's always been free TV it just went from analogue to digital a while ago. How could it not be free? Nobody watches the shit anyway.
@@TallPaulTech ah! Well here in the EU we have also commercial stations which are also broadcasting via the main providers as a digital signal. But its all here mainly by glassfiber/coax but also via the air. But you normally need extra contract to be able to see them via the settopbox but they should be logically transmitted standardly. We are still here in the migration from analog signals. Also the radio still transmits analog signals next to DAB+. Its indeed noticeable that FM signals are better to receive on long distances. The radio switches automatically from DAB to FM.
Awesome series!!! I love your vids, no bullshit, just 100 % pure amazing content! I just Cabled 3 rooms (RG6 Quad) of my place, i'm getting poor singal after i used a 3 way splitter, so i purchased an amp and it works swimmingly! do you know of any courses/hardware so i can improve my knowledge? im in NSW Aust? Cheers Aaron
Mate, thanks. That's exactly how I aim to do these videos. As for your coax, sounds good quality cable, but yeah as you found if you're splitting up the signal then you'll have to give it a boost. An amp won't help a bad signal, but it will help distribute a good signal around.
I notice that there are some DVB-T blocks in GNU Radio Companion. How hard is it to implement a simple DVB-T receiver in GNU Radio Companion? I have been searching for an example but couldn't find any.
What most we do if the channel is krypted ? I have a simcard from the channel provider, but how do I use this in the nettwork stream so Im able to stream them over my network ?
Again, an informative and awesome video in this series. Your channel really deserves more attention!
Learning a lot from this series, I am (progressing towards, was) totally ignorant of how TV worked. Thanks for making these videos. You are going to make me hammer my bank balance for some toys, ah, I mean tools, to look into all this!
Good clear confident teaching. It shows a thorough preparation.
great series mate
Thanks mate
That was excellent thank you very much
Nice. You are a good teacher mate.
Respect from an indian tech enthusiast boy.
You're all too nice. Thanks!
Thank you CWNE88. I have been searching for this information to no avail. You are explaining everything I want to understand. Keep up the great work. I say work, because it takes a lot of research, testing and understanding everything so you can share your knowledge to others.
Thanks mate. 10 years ago when I was first playing with digital tv stuff, I had to compile various things to get it to play h.264 from DVB-T in Europe. It seems so easy now.
Again a question: Are all digital channels in Australia free to watch or do you need for some also an extra contract? If yes, how do you work with that?
Well first and foremost, I don't watch TV. Secondly, yes there's always been free TV it just went from analogue to digital a while ago. How could it not be free? Nobody watches the shit anyway.
@@TallPaulTech ah! Well here in the EU we have also commercial stations which are also broadcasting via the main providers as a digital signal. But its all here mainly by glassfiber/coax but also via the air. But you normally need extra contract to be able to see them via the settopbox but they should be logically transmitted standardly. We are still here in the migration from analog signals. Also the radio still transmits analog signals next to DAB+. Its indeed noticeable that FM signals are better to receive on long distances. The radio switches automatically from DAB to FM.
Nice work - keep it up!
Awesome series!!! I love your vids, no bullshit, just 100 % pure amazing content! I just Cabled 3 rooms (RG6 Quad) of my place, i'm getting poor singal after i used a 3 way splitter, so i purchased an amp and it works swimmingly! do you know of any courses/hardware so i can improve my knowledge? im in NSW Aust? Cheers Aaron
Mate, thanks. That's exactly how I aim to do these videos. As for your coax, sounds good quality cable, but yeah as you found if you're splitting up the signal then you'll have to give it a boost. An amp won't help a bad signal, but it will help distribute a good signal around.
I notice that there are some DVB-T blocks in GNU Radio Companion. How hard is it to implement a simple DVB-T receiver in GNU Radio Companion? I have been searching for an example but couldn't find any.
Cant wait for the next episode
Me neither!
What most we do if the channel is krypted ? I have a simcard from the channel provider, but how do I use this in the nettwork stream so Im able to stream them over my network ?
Hello sir how can run paid channel with dvblast server plz help me
Good channel
Cool
Nice video
I'm seriously loving this series, but mate, that keyboard... go on treat yourself and get a new one.
I can't believe I keep getting upstaged by the keyboard. It's a feature now. Here forever.