Black Hole
May contain traces of nut
What's going to happen if suddenly everyone goes over to Freely instead of their aerial (as our government seem to want)? Where's the Internet bandwidth coming from?

My elderly aunt will have little reason to live if broadcast TV ceases. I'm not exaggerating, she needs help whenever she leaves her apartment. She has no internet and would not be able to handle the inevitable complexity. Even power cycling it when it went down would be a 15 minute phone call to me while she does it and checks the results. This and the switch off of analogue phone lines are being done a decade or two too soon with people left behind.What's going to happen if suddenly everyone goes over to Freely instead of their aerial (as our government seem to want)? Where's the Internet bandwidth coming from?
Does anyone know if Freely is becoming popular. Is it one of those things that becomes popular by default? When your Freeview device fails you can only buy Freely as a replacement. I've noticed that many new TVs are Freely, although the 70" QLED TV mentioned elsewhere isn't.What's going to happen if suddenly everyone goes over to Freely instead of their aerial
I think there was a previous discussion about this some time ago. My recollection is that rather than each user being connected to the broadcaster, the content is cached at various hubs and distributed from them. Maybe someone else can confirm.All well and good while the numbers are low, but I can't believe there is enough bandwidth to cope with mass adoption.
I think that depends on which version of WiFi you are using. I haven't tried WiFi 6 or 7 but I would expect that they would cope.Even if push came to shove and I found I needed to buy a Freely TV or device it would need to be connectable to the internet with an ethernet cable. Wi-fi or powerline connections do not give the rock solid connection needed for heavy duty, high quality video streaming.
I think she might expire before it does.My elderly aunt will have little reason to live if broadcast TV ceases
Bandwidth from where to where? I would expect some sort of Anycast type setup, but I don't know. For example, Google's 8.8.8.8 DNS is not just one server in one place. It's distributed.I can't believe there is enough bandwidth to cope with mass adoption.
Absolutely.it would need to be connectable to the internet with an ethernet cable.
Until there is a load of interference. Such as for all those people who have wireless 'security' cameras which suffer when they just get knocked out by the deliberate jammers who want to break in. You cannot beat a cable.I think that depends on which version of WiFi you are using. I haven't tried WiFi 6 or 7 but I would expect that they would cope.
I have three Freely TVs, and none of them are currently connected to an aerial, although they can be.I don't know, but the Freely advertising says "no need for an aerial, just WiFi", which is the same as Sky Glass. All well and good while the numbers are low, but I can't believe there is enough bandwidth to cope with mass adoption. I think the same about cars with radar: fine while there's only a few of them.
And I agree with Owen: a nightmare for the non-technical if anything goes wrong (and that might include us eventually).
I fully agree, all my mission critical systems are connected to the router with CAT6 cables. Less important systems in awkward positions for cables either use power line adapters or WiFi.You cannot beat a cable.
That's as may be, but once people are using on-demand, each individual requires a stream and it can't be multi-dropped any more. So what are they going to do, store the last two weeks of every channel on a local server? I don't think so.Bandwidth from where to where? I would expect some sort of Anycast type setup, but I don't know. For example, Google's 8.8.8.8 DNS is not just one server in one place. It's distributed.
We will be laughed at for refusing to get the neural splice for the direct to brain switchover.And I agree with Owen: a nightmare for the non-technical if anything goes wrong (and that might include us eventually).