Loans, credit cards, mortgages and bank account comparison, guide and listings.
Car, home, pet, cycle, travel, life insurance listings and content.
Broadband package comparison, tools and content.
Home Phone and VOIP comparison and switching service.
Gas and Electicity comparison and switching service.
Digital TV package listings, prices and content.
Read and respond to our writer’s consumer based observations
home   contact us  about us  accessibility  glossary  register  login   
  
 
  
 
  
 

Search: 

 
Refer this page to a friend
Print this page
Find out more about text sizes

Digital Choices

Need Digital TV? Ready to switch over?
Get fair, unbiased advice in a language you understand
so you make the right choice.
 

Record DTV homes as we approach the first switchover

(21-09-07) - With the first digital switchover only weeks away, Ofcom has announced that 85 per cent of UK homes have already gone digital.

The latest Communications Report on Digital TV showed that 21.4 million homes now enjoy multi-channel television, having increased by 13 per cent over the past year - the strongest growth to date - as the first regions prepare to switch. A massive 81 per cent of this growth came from increased take-up of digital terrestrial TV, which has grown by 52 per cent year on year.

Ed Richards, Ofcom Chief Executive, said: “More than four in five UK households are now enjoying the benefits of digital television. It’s extremely encouraging that we are continuing to see the market grow strongly with less than a month until Whitehaven becomes the first place to fully switch to digital television.”

Freeview (www.Freeview.co.uk) overtook Sky (www.Sky.com) as the most popular multi-channel platform in April this year, and while it continues to be the digital TV supplier of choice, customers wanting to switch now have more options than ever before. Since the beginning of the year, both BT Vision (www.BTVision.bt.com) and Tiscali TV (www.Tiscali.co.uk) have launched their services nationwide and TV-over-broadband continues to grow.

The Government plans to turn the last of the old analogue signal off in 2012, by which time the whole of the UK will have had to switch to digital in order to carry on watching TV.

To find out when your area is set to switch, click here, or for more information on the cost of going digital, click here.

Submit this article:
add to del.icio.us add to digg add to furl
add to reddit add to Technorati add to Blinklist
add to StumbleUpon add to squidoo add to ma.gnolia
add to Yahoo! My Web add to Netscape add to Fark