Discover

FREE-TO-AIR

(Redirected from Free-To-Air)
'Free-to-air' ('FTA') television (TV) and radio broadcasts are sent unencrypted and may be received via any suitable receiver. Free-to-view (FTV) is, generally, available without subscription but is encoded and may be restricted geographically. Neither of these are pay-TV, which is an encrypted subscription (or pay-per-view) service. FTA is usually delivered by satellite television, but in various parts of the world with encrypted digital terrestrial television channels it is broadcast on UHF or VHF bands.
Although these channels are described as free; the viewer does in fact pay for them. Some are paid directly by payment of a licence fee (as in the case of the BBC) or voluntary donation (in the case of educational broadcasters like PBS), others indirectly by paying for consumer products and services where part of the cost goes toward television advertising and sponsorship.
Free-to-air is often used for international broadcasting. It is television's equivalent to shortwave radio.

Contents
Australia
South Asia
South Korea
SAME HAS BEEN MIGRATED TO INSAT 4B
Europe
New Zealand
North America
See also
External links

Australia


Australia's two main government-owned TV channels, ABC and SBS, along with the digital-only multichannels ABC2 and the SBS World News Channel are both availably free-to-air on the NSS5 satellite (SBS can also be received from the Optus B1 satellite). Viewers in remote parts of Australia can also access Seven Central and Imparja Television, or WIN WA and GWN through the free-to-view Optus Aurora program.
Other satellite-only channels such as Indigenous Community Television, TVSN, and Al Jazeera English are available free-to-air on various satellites.

South Asia


Around 33 FTA television channels are broadcast from three transponders on the NSS-6 satellite covering India, Pakistan, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and parts of Afghanistan, China, and Myanmar. In India The channels are marketed by Doordarshan, India's national broadcaster as "DD Direct +", although other channels such as dw tv and Zee Music are also provided.

South Korea


In Korea, KBS, MBC (2 main public broadcaster, such as the ARD and ZDF of Germany), SBS (privately owned, but for free to viewers), and EBS (including both TV and Radio) are the free-to-air broadcasting stations.
They dominate more than 80% of advertisement profits, according to the recent survey from the agency KOBACO.
Due to the recent government's decision, Digital TV service for all free-to-air network will be scheduled before the year 2012, following at the end of analogue-based current broadcast.

SAME HAS BEEN MIGRATED TO INSAT 4B


PLEASE VISIT THE PAGE
FEM MORE CHANNELS HAVE BEEN ADDED TO DD DIRECT PLUS

Europe


European countries have a tradition of most television services being free to air. Germany, in particular, receives in excess of 100 digital TV channels free to air, including MTV (which remains encrypted for much of Europe). Approximately half of the television channels on SES Astra 1 (19.2E) and 2 (28.2E), and Eutelsat Hotbird (13E) are free to air.
In general, all satellite radio in Europe is free to air, but the more conventional broadcast systems in use mean that XM and Sirius style in-car reception is not possible.
A number of European channels which would likely be free-to-air, including many countries national terrestrial broadcasters, do not do so for copyright reasons - rights to purchase shows to show free-to-air are often higher in price than for encrypted broadcasts. However, these channels usually provide a scheme to offer free, but encrypted, viewing with free-to-view broadcasts. The UK's Channel 4 and Five, certain programming on Italy's RAI, and the majority of Dutch channels are covered by such schemes.

New Zealand


The national networks, Television New Zealand TV ONE and TV2, and Māori Television are free-to-air on Optus B1. The Freeview is also free-to-air.

North America


There are a number of competing systems in use, with early adopters having used C-band satellite dishes of several feet in diameter to receive signals which were originally analogue FM, later digital using the Motorola-proprietary Digicipher II system or later still going to Ku-band and under one-metre dishes with most often the international DVB standard.
The most common North American sources for free-to-air DVB satellite television are:

★ Ethnic-language broadcasters such as Globecast World TV on Galaxy 25 (97°W)

★ Christian broadcasters promoted by Glorystar & Spiritcast Satellite Systems TV on Galaxy 25 (97°W)

★ Individual local stations of major US terrestrial TV networks, such as the Equity Broadcasting stations on Galaxy 10R (123°W)

★ Public educational broadcasters including PBS on AMC3 (87°W)
Most of these signals are carried by US satellites. There is little or no free Canadian DVB content available to users of medium-size dishes as much of the available Ku-band satellite bandwidth is occupied by pay-TV operators Star Choice and Bell Expressvu. FTA signals may be scattered across multiple satellites, requiring a motor or multiple LNBs to receive everything.
The largest groups of end-users for Ku-band free-to-air signals were initially the ethnic-language communities, as often free ethnic-language programming would be sponsored by foreign governments or broadcasters. Depending on language and origin of the individual signals, North American ethnic-language TV is a mix of pay-TV, free-to-air and DBS operations.
Nonetheless, free-to-air satellite TV is a viable alternative for use in locations where terrestrial over-the-air reception is poor. Digital terrestrial signals, where available, most often tend to be low-power and therefore coverage outside major cities depends largely on analogue terrestrial reception, subscription TV or satellite TV.

See also



Satellite dish

Satellite television

Set-top box

Spiritcast

External links



Updated Channel List

Angles Calculator

Free to air TV channels

Free to air radio stations

Listings of North America FTA, including sorting by language

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves