The OH bought an LCD HD ready 32" TV. We do not subscribe to HD service and of course do not have an HD receiver box. The picture is CRAPPY but was great in the store. Picture is better on 4:3 ration but OH feels he paid for a wide screen and is going to watch it, bad picture or not. I know, problem is the OH. 
We really don't watch that much TV and I feel the HD receiver expense is not justified for us BUT, if we buy a receiver must we also subscribe to HD programming to get it to work?
A Bell chat line service rep said today that we could keep our old program package. It is very old, grandfathered and no longer available for purchase. Gee, I tend to not believe her. Is she right?
In my attempts to research this I have discovered that some HD receiver boxes will automatically switch between HD and NTSC signal (going from memory, may have the acronyms wrong) and some require manual switching. What does the lowest level Bell HD box do?
Sorry for dumb questions. When it got to TVs and signals and stuff my brain shut down.
We really don't watch that much TV and I feel the HD receiver expense is not justified for us BUT, if we buy a receiver must we also subscribe to HD programming to get it to work?
A Bell chat line service rep said today that we could keep our old program package. It is very old, grandfathered and no longer available for purchase. Gee, I tend to not believe her. Is she right?
In my attempts to research this I have discovered that some HD receiver boxes will automatically switch between HD and NTSC signal (going from memory, may have the acronyms wrong) and some require manual switching. What does the lowest level Bell HD box do?
Sorry for dumb questions. When it got to TVs and signals and stuff my brain shut down.