Archive

Archive for April, 2010

Where can I get satellite tv software for my PC?

April 30th, 2010 Max 3 comments

I want to watch tv on PC.

Does your comcast internet cable and cable tv share the same outlet?

April 30th, 2010 Max 7 comments

I have comcast internet but not cable tv. If I split the line can I still get cable tv? This means connecting one cord to internet router and the other to tv?

How to watch FREE Satellite TV on PC 3500+ HD Channels

April 29th, 2010 Max No comments

Cable TV Companies Bring True High Speed Internet Access Home

April 29th, 2010 Max No comments

The Internet provides a great number of opportunities for entertainment, connecting with

friends and business associates, getting an education, tracking investments, and finding

great deals while shopping. With all of these advantages, you probably want to have a

high speed Internet connection in your home if you don’t have one there already. While

upgrading from dial up is a good thing to do, you’re probably kind of confused by the

options that you have available to you. This is understandable with all of the different

technologies and the companies that are offering them that you have to choose from.

If you’re fortunate enough to have access to cable TV, then you’re also probably

fortunate enough to be able to get an Internet connection that’s delivered over that same

broad band digital cable technology. Granted that if you have access to cable Internet,

then you also probably have access to DSL, satellite, and possibly some kind of

municipal WiFi Internet as well, but there are still a lot of reasons to consider broad band

cable.

The first advantage that broad band cable has over other forms of broad band Internet

technology is speed. With the possible exception of muni WiFi, broad band cable high

speed Internet has the largest bandwidths with download speeds that vary from six to

twelve megabytes per second, depending on the level of service that’s been subscribed

to and whether or not the special Power Boost feature (which increases the baseline

download speed by fifty percent for larger downloads) has kicked in. Both satellite

Internet and DSL have bandwidths that are stuck around three megabytes per second

and often quite lower, depending on where you live and how much you’re willing to pay.

Getting your Internet connection over a cable also provides a greater level of security

than any kind of WiFi. In fact, there are even people who look for WiFi connections so

that they can see what’s being transmitted- in effect spying on what WiFi users are

looking at. Since there isn’t a good way to make muni WiFi service secure, this is a very

real danger. It’s also theoretically possible to spy on satellite Internet signals as well.

Naturally, since DSL is transmitted over phone lines, it has a similar level of security to

broad band digital cable Internet connection, but there are many other ways in which an

Internet connection based on digital cable technology is superior. The fact that cables

are a lot beefier than phone lines means that the signal that can be sent over them is a

lot faster and more reliable. After all, skinny phone lines are subject to a lot more

interference than coaxial cables and that interference can really slow things down.

All of the extra speed and reliability and security that you can get from a broad band

cable Internet connection such as Comcast’s translates into a level of Internet

performance that you’ve probably only experienced in libraries, coffee shops, or at work

up to this point.

The Internet is an increasingly vital part of everyday life and this technology can help

you make the most of it.

TVonPC Pro Watch Over 1700 TV Channels On Your Computer

April 29th, 2010 Max 2 comments

When all you have is analog cable, what cable and inputs do you use when connecting a LCD TV to a receiver?

April 29th, 2010 Max 2 comments

Analog cable tv so I know it’ll be Pro Logic II sound. I’ve just never set up anything but 5.1 digital so I don’t know what inputs and outputs to use and what kind of cable to use to connect the tv and receiver. Thanks.

when using vga to connect tv to pc what do I do to see video on tv screen?

April 28th, 2010 Max 1 comment

all I see is the desktop background. I want to watch youtube on my tv.