I can still run DOS TurboTax on a DOS machine if I want toI'm sure you could run it, but the tax information in the old version isn't current. I couldn't find anything on Intuit's site that said they have updates for the DOS version which is why I used them as an analogy.
Anyway, the reason there won't be 2 signals broacast is this(quoted from [link|http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/08/08/scitech/pcanswer/main518090.shtml|here])
The FCC's goal is to eventually have all consumers watching digital TV so that the existing analog TV spectrum can be returned back to the government for re-allocation for other purposes.
How do I run my NTSC TV sets (in which I DO have a significant investment) when there is no signal? Oh, I can buy a converter box for each? OK, how much? Shit, that's as much as I have invested in my entire TV collection!Yep, you buy a converter box. Sure, the converters are expensive
now, but that's why there is a transition going on. By the time the NTSC signal is gone they won't be in the $300+ range. [link|http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/08/08/scitech/pcanswer/main518090.shtml|The same article] has this interesting tidbit -
citing a study from Arthur D. Little that says that the retail price of such tuners, by 2006 will be only about $16. If you (or Orion) are too hardup for that, give me a call and I'll pick one up for you.
This whole topic appears to me as yet another "they're out to screw me" topic by Orion. However, in this instance, they're not. If they were truly out to get him, they'd have flipped off the old signal immediately instead of having the transition period.
Darrell Spice, Jr.
[link|http://home.houston.rr.com/spiceware/|SpiceWare] - We don't do Windows, it's too much of a chore