In the days of analog TV and wood siding, we had problems getting all stations on all TVs in our house. When we got steel siding in 2003, we also got economy cable, recognizing that the reception situation would likely get worse. While I've had interest in going OTA and cord cutting for a while, recent changes in billing from our cable company have heightened the interest. Every TV beyond the first two is an additional $60/year.
We aren't quite ready to cut the cord. Live NFL football, Wheel of Fortune, and some other programming isn't available streaming. Also, the incremental cost of upgrading our internet from DSL is about the same as our economy cable bill. Without the internet upgrade, we can't do more than one video stream at a time, particularly HD programming.
Besides indoor antennas, other solutions include one on the roof or one in the attic. For various (weak) reasons, they aren't my preferred approach.
The first step for both indoor and outdoor antennas is to identify the location of the transmitters relative to your location and their estimated signal strength. This information is available from an FCC web site . From our house, FOX is at 4:00, ABC and PBS are at 10:00, and CBS and NBC at 11:00 in the figure below. Distances are 25 miles or more.
In reading antenna reviews, there are a lot of comments about how low cost antennas work better than more expensive antennas for some people. Location of an indoor antenna is also critical due to signal physics such as reflection, diffraction, and more. The physics curious can read more . The good news is that the ghosting experienced by analog TV is eliminated in digital. The bad news is that some of the signal strength issues are counter-intuitive and some are seasonal as roofs get snow, trees gain and shed leaves, and cars come and go in driveways.
My personal preference is to avoid buying something that doesn't work and having to return it to the store. Another is to get solutions which are robust. This led to my selection of a wall-mountable, amplified, omni-directional antenna, the Mohu Leaf 50 Amplified Antenna via Amazon.com. There were good reviews for the antenna and I liked that it incorporated military signal processing technology.
Once the antenna arrived, I started methodically trying it in several possible TV locations. With cable, one locates the TV near a wall jack. In OTA, the placement of the TV is where the acceptable station list is available. For example, we could get by with one station in the kitchen, if it was the right station. Unfortunately that station was not among the four (all PBS) we could receive there. At the sixth antenna location, we got all 12 known Fargo DTV stations (WDAY x 4 including CW, KXJB, KVLY, MeTV, KVRR, and KFME x 4). That location makes sense in terms of height near the ceiling and a steel-siding-free line-of-site view of the three transmitter locations. The process of testing a location is simple : temporarily locate the antenna (eg taped to the wall), attach the antenna to the TV, run the TV channel scan, and check the results for stations received and picture quality.
A couple things I liked about the Leaf 50 antenna were that it is omni-directional (ie it receives stations in any direction relative to it) and that it mounts flat on the wall or other surfaces. This makes it easier to get it closer to the ceiling where we generally got more stations. Because the antenna is amplified and the tall trees near our house are gone, I'm hopeful that we won't have seasonal issues. Another variable for us will be snow on the roof. Currently there is little to none, but it can get two feet deep.
Our plan is to use our allotted cable boxes where OTA signals don't meet our needs, such as the PBS-only kitchen and the below ground family room. Success with the antenna may provide more confidence in a rooftop solution at some point. The main pro is that there is a single, typically more expensive, antenna to feed our eight wall jacks. The cons include an antenna exposed to the elements, losing a few cable channels like CSPAN and community access, and having TVs located close to wall jacks.
Update after over a year of experience : The antennas have generally worked well for us. There has been weak or lost signal from rain, snow on the roof, vegetation on the trees, and our artificial Christmas tree being set up. The solution has been to move the antenna to get a stronger signal for the station we are watching, but typically at the cost of loosing other stations. In my den, I have the antenna tacked on a bulletin board which makes it easy to move the antenna.
Sunday, January 4, 2015
Saturday, January 3, 2015
Noel's 2014 Walking Statistics
Audio Books
Kindle and Print Books
Entire
Significant Parts (mostly related to a church governance project I am involved with)
January
Walking MTD / YTD : 228.6 /228.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 3 (0 schedule, 0 illness, 1 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 228.6 / 280 = 0.816 (PB 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 8.4 / 8.5 hours (29.8 inches season)
February
Walking MTD / YTD : 213.2* /441.8 miles (72.2 miles week of 2/16)
Goose-egg days: 5 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 441.8 / 440 = 1.004 (PB 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 1.9 / 10.4 hours (27.6 inches season)
* Subtracted 4.8 miles instead of adding 5.2 miles on Feb 23. Adjusted monthly total by +10.
March
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.7 /643.5 miles does not equal 203.2 + 201.7!
Goose-egg days: 5 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 643.5 / 724 = 0.889 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 0.3 / 10.7 hours (30.2 inches season)
April
Walking MTD / YTD : 221.5 /865.0 miles
Goose-egg days: 6 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 865.0 / 879 = 0.984 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 0.984 4/30/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 0.6 / 11.3 hours (34.9 inches season)
May
Walking MTD / YTD : 241.1 /1104.1 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1104.1 / 1212 = 0.911 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Note : 70 miles May 1-7 Big Hare Days : 115,50,45,37,26,26,26
June
Walking MTD / YTD : 203.0 /1307.1 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1307.1 / 1432 = 0.913 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,53,50,46,45,37,26,26,26
July
Walking MTD / YTD : 225.1 /1534.2 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1534.2 / 1708 = 0.898 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,26,26,26
August
Walking MTD / YTD : 234.0** /1768.2 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1768.2 / 1992 = 0.888 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,30,26,26,26
** Did not add miles to MTD on 8/12. Adjusted MTD for this an error in an earlier month.
September
Walking MTD / YTD : 173.1 /1941.3 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (3 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy, sept 1)
Eric Ratio : 1941.3 / 2178 = 0.891 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,26,26,26,26
October
Walking MTD / YTD : 233.3 /2173.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (4 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2173.6 / 2331 = 0.933 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,26,26,26,26,26
November
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.0 / 2374.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (4 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2374.6 / 2446 = 0.968 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,30,26,26,26,26,26
December
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.3 / 2575.9 miles
Goose-egg days: 12 (5 schedule, 1 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2575.9* / 2670 = 0.965* (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.970 12/26/14)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,37,30,30,26,26,26,26,26
Shoveling day/season : 0.0 / 1.2 hours (4.2 inches season and only 0.9 inches Dec)
- _Untamed: Reactivating a Missional Form of Discipleship_ by Alan Hirsch and Debra Hirsch
- _Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant_ by W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborne
- _Where Good Ideas Come From_ by Steven Johnson
- _The Meaning of Marriage: Facing the Complexities of Commitment with the Wisdom of God_ by Timothy Keller
- _Automate This: How Algorithms Came to Rule Our World_ by Christopher Steiner
- _On the Verge: A journey into the Apostolic Future of the Church_ by Alan Hirsch and Dave Ferguson
- _Exponential: How to Accomplish the Jesus Mission _ by Dave Ferguson and Jon Ferguson
- _The Innovator's DNA: Mastering the Five Skills of Disruptive Innovation_ by Jeff Dyer, Hal Gregersen, and Clayton Christensen
- _The Wizard of Menlo Park: How Thomas Alva Edison Invented the Modern World_ by Randall E Stross
- _King's Cross: The Story of the World in the Life of Jesus" by Timothy Keller
- _Romans 1-7 for You_ by Timothy Keller
- _Hybrid Church: The Fusion of Intimacy and Impact _ by Dave Browning
- _The Call_ by Os Guiness
- _Simple Church: Returning to God's Process for Making Disciples_ by Thom Rainer and Eric Geiger
- _The Lords of Strategy: The Secret Intellectual History of the New Corporate World_ by Walter Kiechel
- _Understanding Michael Porter: The Essential Guide to Competition and Strategy_ by Joan Magretta
- _Good Strategy/Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters_ by Richard Rummelt
- _Encounters with Jesus: Unexpected Answers to Life's Biggest Questions_ by Timothy Keller
- _Inside the Box: A Proven System of Creativity for Breakthrough Results_ by Drew Boyd and Jacob Goldenberg
- _Visioneering: God's Blueprint for Developing and Maintaining Vision_ by Andy Stanley
- _Crucial Confrontations_ by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, and Ron McMillan
- _The Story of Jesus, NIV: Experiencing the Life of Jesus as One Seamless Story_
- _Beyond the Idea: How to Execute Innovation in Any Organization_ by Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble
- _Every Good Endeavor : Connecting Your Work to God's Work_ by Timothy Keller
- _Organic Church : Growing Faith Where Life Happens_ by Neil Cole
- _How Stella Saved the Farm: A Tale About Making Innovation Happen_ by Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble
- _The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else in Business_ by Patrick Lencioni
- _Center Church: Doing Balanced, Gospel-Centered Ministry in Your City_ by Timothy Keller
- _The Idea Factory: Bell labs and the Great Age of American Innovation_ by Jon Gertner
- _unchristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks About Christianity...and Why it Matters_ by David Kinnaman
- _Jony Ive: The genius Behind Apple's Greatest Products_ by Leander Kahney
- _The Meaning of it All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist_ by Richard Feynman
- _Church 3.0: Upgrades for the Future of the Church_ by Neil Cole
- _Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God_ by Timothy Keller
- _What matters Now: How to Win in a World of Relentless Change, Erocious Competition, and Unstoppable Innovation_ by Gary Hamel
Kindle and Print Books
Entire
- _The Forgotten Ways_ by Alan Hirsch
Significant Parts (mostly related to a church governance project I am involved with)
- _Rick Steves' German 2014_ by Rick Steves
- _Biblical Eldership_ by Alexander Strauch
- _Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking_ by Susan Cain
- _Leading Leaders: Empowering Boards for Church Excellence_ by Aubrey Malphurs
- _Finding God at Harvard: Spiritual Journeys of Thinking Christians_ edited by Kelly Monroe Kullberg
- _Winning on Purpose: How to Organize Congregations to Succeed in Their Mission_ by John Edmund Kaiser
- _Elders and Leaders: God's Plan for Organizing the Church_ by Gene Getz
January
Walking MTD / YTD : 228.6 /228.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 3 (0 schedule, 0 illness, 1 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 228.6 / 280 = 0.816 (PB 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 8.4 / 8.5 hours (29.8 inches season)
February
Walking MTD / YTD : 213.2* /441.8 miles (72.2 miles week of 2/16)
Goose-egg days: 5 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 441.8 / 440 = 1.004 (PB 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 1.9 / 10.4 hours (27.6 inches season)
* Subtracted 4.8 miles instead of adding 5.2 miles on Feb 23. Adjusted monthly total by +10.
March
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.7 /643.5 miles does not equal 203.2 + 201.7!
Goose-egg days: 5 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 2 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 643.5 / 724 = 0.889 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 0.3 / 10.7 hours (30.2 inches season)
April
Walking MTD / YTD : 221.5 /865.0 miles
Goose-egg days: 6 (1 schedule, 0 illness, 2 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 865.0 / 879 = 0.984 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 0.984 4/30/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Shoveling MTD / seasonTD : 0.6 / 11.3 hours (34.9 inches season)
May
Walking MTD / YTD : 241.1 /1104.1 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1104.1 / 1212 = 0.911 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Note : 70 miles May 1-7 Big Hare Days : 115,50,45,37,26,26,26
June
Walking MTD / YTD : 203.0 /1307.1 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1307.1 / 1432 = 0.913 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,53,50,46,45,37,26,26,26
July
Walking MTD / YTD : 225.1 /1534.2 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1534.2 / 1708 = 0.898 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,26,26,26
August
Walking MTD / YTD : 234.0** /1768.2 miles
Goose-egg days: 8 (2 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 1768.2 / 1992 = 0.888 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,30,26,26,26
** Did not add miles to MTD on 8/12. Adjusted MTD for this an error in an earlier month.
September
Walking MTD / YTD : 173.1 /1941.3 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (3 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy, sept 1)
Eric Ratio : 1941.3 / 2178 = 0.891 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,26,26,26,26
October
Walking MTD / YTD : 233.3 /2173.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (4 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2173.6 / 2331 = 0.933 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,26,26,26,26,26
November
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.0 / 2374.6 miles
Goose-egg days: 10 (4 schedule, 0 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2374.6 / 2446 = 0.968 (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.814 12/20/13)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,30,30,26,26,26,26,26
December
Walking MTD / YTD : 201.3 / 2575.9 miles
Goose-egg days: 12 (5 schedule, 1 illness, 3 weather, 3 lazy)
Eric Ratio : 2575.9* / 2670 = 0.965* (PB 1.025 3/1/14; 1.007 5/4/14; 0.970 12/26/14)
Big Hare Days : 115,100,53,50,46,45,42,38,38,37,37,37,30,30,26,26,26,26,26
Shoveling day/season : 0.0 / 1.2 hours (4.2 inches season and only 0.9 inches Dec)
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