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RabbitEars

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American broadcast TV website
This article is about the website. For other uses, seeRabbit Ears.
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RabbitEars
RabbitEars website logo
RabbitEars logo
FormationApril 14, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-04-14)
PurposeEducational
HeadquartersVirtual space
Region served
United States
Official language
English
Owner
Trip Ericson
Main organ
Website
Staff4
WebsiteRabbitEars.info

RabbitEars (also known as the website nameRabbitEars.info) is a website that provides information on over-the-air digital television in the United States, its territories, protectorates, and border areas of Canada and Mexico.

RabbitEars has been cited by major U.S. news outlets for digital television reporting.

History

[edit]

RabbitEars was created to replace 100000watts.com, a site started by Chip Kelley around 1998. Originally listing every TV station in the US, 100000watts expanded to includeAM andFM radio information. Due to time constraints, Kelley sold the site to Clear Channel/M Street Publications in late 2002,[1] which made it subscription-only. In response, Trip Ericson developed RabbitEars as a free alternative.[2]

After thedigital television transition started in 2008, RabbitEars began trackingdigital subchannels, digital transition reports, and analog termination requests made to the FCC. These pages were attached to an incomplete design that Ericson had begun to implement in 2004, but that had never been finished due to lack of coding knowledge. As the transition-related pages in particular received attention, corrections were sent to add to and correct the incomplete data that was kept on the rest of the site, and a notice was posted asking for additional assistance. On March 14, 2008, Bruce Myers joined the effort by creating an updated website design, and on April 14, 2008, RabbitEars launched in its current form.[2] Because of these circumstances, while the web address was registered in 2004, the 2008 date is considered to be the beginning of the organization.

Data

[edit]

RabbitEars maintains a spreadsheet of DTV channels that includes information about stations such as their locations,call signs,network affiliations, channel,ERP,HAAT, and more for full-service DTV stations.[2]

RabbitEars tracks stations that usedescriptive video service,TVGOS,UpdateTV,mobile TV,Sezmi, and individualdatacasts provided by local television stations in addition to providing lists of television station ownership, network affiliations, and some other miscellaneous information. It covered thedigital television transition extensively, and maintains a history of the transition. Also provided is continuing documentation of stations requesting different channels, as well as stations having problems withVHF transmission.

At the end of October 2009, the site added listings forQualcomm'sMediaFLO service, which has since gone defunct. In December 2009, the site also added listings for high powered transmittersEchostar would be using to launch its own mobile video service.[3]

Rankings

[edit]

The RabbitEars Area Designation System (READS) was created in 2008 to rank markets based on OTA signal coverage without using proprietary data from Nielsen Media Research.[4][2] READS ranks are based solely on signal coverage and do not consider demographic data. Consequently, major Canadian markets like Toronto and Montreal are included but rank low, while other Canadian markets like Edmonton are excluded due to the lack of OTA American channels.

The READS list has been made available for use by anyone who wants to use them, with the only condition being that the ranks are not modified and still listed with the name "READS".

References

[edit]
  1. ^Fybush, Scott (April 27, 2005)."[BC] 100000watts.com (was: XETRA-690 to be bought by Spanish network)".radiolists.net. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2009.
  2. ^abcdJay (July 12, 2009)."RabbitEars.info - Interview with Webmaster Trip Ericson".dtvusaforum.com. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2009.
  3. ^Jessell, Harry (December 10, 2009)."CES To Offer Look Into Mobile DTV Future".TVNewsCheck. RetrievedDecember 22, 2009.
  4. ^timothy (September 20, 2008)."Nielsen Sends Wikipedia DMCA Takedown For Station Descriptions".Slashdot. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2009.

External links

[edit]
Digital television in North America
Terrestrial
Digital broadcasting
Digital switchover
Digital standards
Digital networks
National deployment
Cable
Digital cable
Subscription TV
Satellite TV
IPTV
Technical issues
READS market ranking system
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