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Yes - the digital switchover has nothing to do with HD. Like I said above, if you've got a color TV with a remote, the chances that your TV won't be able to receive a digital signal are practically nil.
I think the electronics marketing people are trying to confuse us into buying really expensive TV's.
Well, my Sony Wega tube TV is color and has a remote but it can't decode digital TV signals.
It can display HD, though, so long as it is presented on the composite inputs.
It wouldn't let me cut/delete (cut does nothing, delete deletes the message), but now I see that if I open the message in its own window I get a "remove" option in the right-click menu.
It's annoying that that doesn't work in the preview pane.
What about digital TV if you only have rabbit ears for reception? I have a color TV with a remote.
I should point out that my pre-coffee reponse up there left out the fact that we have a digital converter box, and have for a few years. I tend to forget the thing isn't part of the actual TV.
So if it's got a remote, it's a digital TV?
Is the difference between a coaxial connection and a converter box? I'd guess that if you have to connect your antenna to the TV with a standard screwdriver, you've got an analog connection.
So if it's got a remote, it's a digital TV?
Nope.
In theory, once they start selling converter boxes as more than a speciality item this year, with the FCC $40 coupon, it'll be about $10-$20 to get a box so that any old TV can get a digital signal.