This has probably already been answered numerous times, but here goes:
I currently have a cable subscription with the following packages:
Local Plus TV
Family TV
Sports and Info Digital Pak
Kids and Variety Digtal Pak
Movies and Music Digital Pak
Starz and Encore Premium Digital Pak
The first two are basic cable and the rest are digital add-ons.
I recently got a digital TV to replace the one in my kitchen (no cable box) and I cannot get it to pick up anything above the two basic packages. What is different about the cable box that I can’t pick up the digital channels with a digital TV? If it makes any difference, the channels in the digital packs are all three digits but no decimals.
My guess would be that your cable company requires a decoder box to unscramble anything above the two basic packages. So, even if your TV is “digital ready” or “cable ready”, if your cable company is scrambling the higher-tier packages, you’ll need a separate cable box for the TV in your kitchen to use the channels in those packages.
Yes, most premium content on cable in the US is encrypted (scrambled) and will require the cable company’s decoder box or a device with a cable card in it. In some cities I have heard reports of all channels being encrypted, it depends on the cable company.
Am I missing something? New TV. Cable not fully work with TV. Solution? Ask cable company. Perhaps they can furnish the equipment you need, maybe even free of charge, since you subscribe already.
I am fully prepared to admit that I am simply misunderstanding something.
While the OP’s cable company might still be feeding some analog channels still, let’s assume that the situation is like most cable situations in the US and it’s all digital now.
Some channels are aired in the clear (QAM), as it were. No decoder need except a suitable digital tuner. On my system this includes the local OTA channels including their digital side channels. Also I get a bunch of crap like the shopping channels and some info/weather channels.
Everything else in encrypted. This includes not just premium channels like HBO, but almost all basic cable channels like USA, TCM, etc.
My system offers a cheap DTA box to watch “basic cable”. (Mostly the old 70+ channel tier.) But that uses its own remote, etc. and the output is analog(!). To watch in digital as well as to get premium channels requires either a full cable box or your own device that can handle a CableCard. (I use the later in my DVR.) Then you have hundreds of channels including HD versions.
So it sounds like the OP’s provider isn’t scrambling so many channels, but an additional device would be needed to get the rest.
What model is your tv? You might have a cable card slot. If you do, you can get a cable card from your provider, pop it in and that will serve to decode the digital signals.
I have not seen CableCard TV’s for sale for years. They are essentially obsolete since they cannot be used for VOD or on cable systems that adopted SDV.
I do not believe that anyone has marketed a TV that supported bi-directional hardware. The closest was the Panasonic Tru2Way sets that were tested in a few markets, then dropped a few years ago.
The TV is an Orion that I bought at Walmart for $78 so it’s probably pretty no-frills. I looked, but I didn’t see a slot for anything, but I don’t know what a CableCard slot would look like.
I got my most recent CableCard less than two months ago. Works fine on an SDV system (Cox). No, it doesn’t support VOD, but I have Hulu+, Amazon Prime, Netflix and HBO Go for that. No issues.
I think one of the big things being missed in this thread is that “digital TV” (over the air, ATSC) and “digital cable” are entirely different things. A TV that claims to be “digital” is more likely advertising its ability to receive OTA ATSC digital broadcasts, not digital cable (though most do also have QAM tuners, which can get digital cable channels which aren’t encrypted). IMHO the cable companies have taken advantage of the public’s confusion over the difference, by using the “digital transition” a few years ago (which technically only applied to OTA broadcast) to sell people digital cable.