Digital cable is a term used to describe a type of cable television distribution using digital video compression. The technology was developed by Motorola
Digital Cable allows for the broadcast of EDTV (480p) as well as HDTV (720p, 1080i, and soon 1080p). A capability that is not shared with analog cable, which transmits programs solely in the 480i format (the lowest television definition).
The ATSC standards include a provision for 16-VSB transmission over cable at 38.4 Mbit/s, but the encoding has not yet gained wide acceptance. Some MATV systems may carry 8-VSB and QAM signals, mostly in apartment buildings and similar facilities that use a combination of terrestrial antennas and cable distribution sources (such as HITS or "Headend In The Sky", a unit of Comcast that delivers digital channels by satellite to small cable systems).
Digital cable channels typically are allocated above 552 MHz, the upper frequency of cable channel 78. (Cable channels above channel 13 are at lower frequencies than UHF broadcast channels with the same number.) Between 552 and 750 MHz, there is space for 33 6-MHz channels (231–396 SDTV channels); when going all the way to 864 MHz, there is space for 52 6-MHz channels (364–624 SDTV channels).
In the U.S., digital cable systems with 750 MHz or greater activated channel capacity are required to comply with a set of SCTE and CEA standards, and to provide CableCARDs to customers that request them.
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