![]() ![]() Looking inside the files I can see what I think is the section relevant to me - it's labelled with the name of my local transmitter: I certainly am able to tune in a huge number of channels though, 135 all told including radio services. Last time I regularly watched TV avidly, there were only 5 channels. I would unfortunately, not have a clue if I were missing any channels - It's only very recently (since I've switched fully over from Windows to Linux, and since I've been less busy day to day with non TV life) that I've been bothered at all about watching TV, so unlike many regular watchers I'm not really too aware of what should and shouldn't be present these days. The date,, does seem older than the latest version online that is labelled. # this file is automatically generated from Kaffeine > Digital TV > Television >Configure Television > Edit Scanfile shows me a text file named 'scanfile.dvb' as follows: They make 2, 4, and 6 tuner US models (QAM and ATSC). if you find one on-sale or used (DLNA capable models), buy if the price fits your budget. ZERO drivers needed, just a wired ethernet and connection to the antenna(s). Plex, kodi, tvheadend, mythtv, and all the commercial methods are supported too. Apps for Android and all the other OSes exist. A raspberry-pi v2 or better can be used to watch and record on the low end. ![]() These things are extremely well supported and there are probably 50-100 software methods to watch and/or record with them. If you want 2 or 4 tuners, the HDHR link provided above will lead to models with that capability. That means 1 channel can be recorded though in the US on ATSC that 1 channel has 20 Mbps bandwidth and often has 4 sub-channels so all the programs on those subchannels CAN be recorded too using only 1 "tuner" if the software is smart enough. ![]()
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