View Single Post
Old 23-06-2005, 23:55   #16
bopdude
Inactive
 
bopdude's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Teesside
Posts: 8,315
bopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny stars
bopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny starsbopdude has a pair of shiny stars
Send a message via MSN to bopdude
Re: tv through broadband

Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt D
1) If you split the coax cable running to the modem, & run one lead to the TV & another to the modem, you still will not be able to receive Sky One, E4, Paramount, etc etc etc. The only channels you would be likely to receive would be the unencrypted analogue channels: BBC1, BBC2, ITV, C4, C5, & maybe Sky News and ITV News.
and in some cases, maybe somebody I know *cough, you might in theory *cough, get TCM, Sci-Fi, The Box, about 13 channels in all, not saying it's big or clever, or indeed legal, but who is 100% legal these days
bopdude is offline   Reply With Quote